Abstract: | Skewed sex ratios are common among several species of Poeciliopsis, a viviparous fish from northwestern Mexico. Since previous, unrelated studies from this laboratory (Angus and Schultz, 1983) suggested that deviation from a 1:1 sex ratio might be influenced by temperature, two inbred strains of P. lucida were tested for temperature-dependent sex determination by comparing sex ratios of offspring from pregnant females held at different water temperatures. Different sex ratios were produced by the two strains at the same temperature: one strain produced almost all-male offspring at 30°C and female-biased sex ratios at 24°C, while the other strain produced a 1:1 sex ratio at both temperatures. At intermediate temperatures, the labile strain produced sequentially fewer males with decreasing temperatures. The other strain produced a consistent sex ratio regardless of temperature. Poeciliopsis lucida apparently has a genetic polymorphism for temperature-influenced sex determination. An hypothesis is offered for the evolutionary origin of environmental sex determination. |