Abstract: | Triploidy is a viable condition in teleosts. However, in many salmonids, the triploid condition in the female results in sterility as gametogenesis appears to be disrupted. Although the underlying mechanisms regulating the gonadal development of teleosts have not been clearly elucidated, the reversal of phenotypic sex by the administration of the appropriate exogenous steroid during early development supports the argument that gonadal steroids play a pivotal role in sexual differentiation and subsequent gonad development in these fish. To determine whether the failure of normal ovarian development in triploid female rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is due to an absence or reduction of endogenous sex steroids, ovarian morphology was compared between diploid and triploid juvenile rainbow trout treated with exogenous estradiol-17β (E2). The ovaries of both untreated and E2 treated diploid fish, at 145 days post-fertilization, contained synchronously developing oocytes in the perinucleolar stage, whereas ovaries from untreated and estradiol-treated triploid fish of the same age were considerably smaller and devoid of developing oocytes. No differences in the ovaries of triploid untreated fish and triploid fish treated with E2 were observed. It is reported that exposure to exogenous E2 during the period of gonadal differentiation is not sufficient to induce oocyte development in triploid rainbow trout. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc. |