The sexual system of the caridean genus Lysmata has been described until recently as protandric hermaphroditism, in which individuals change sex from male to female with increasing size. However, recent studies by Bauer andHolt (1998) andFiedler (1998) have shown that female-phase individuals of at least two species are outcrossing simultaneous hermaphrodites, a sexual system described here as protandric simultaneous hermaphroditism (PSH). There is considerable variation in the ontogeny of protandric carideans, revealing an underlying flexibility in sex determination and development which has made PSH possible in at least some Lysmata spp. Possible costs and benefits of retention of male reproductive function in female-phase hermaphrodites are proposed. The PSH appears to be unique (to date) within the Decapoda and other Malacostraca to the caridean genus Lysmata and perhaps the related genus Exhippolysmata. It is puzzling that PSH has evolved in a group with such considerable variation in socio-ecological attributes: some Lysmata species are warm temperate, highly aggregated, with unspecialized (facultative) fish-cleaning behavior while others are tropical species, occur at low density in hermaphrodite pairs associated with sea anemones, and are specialized fish cleaners. Description of sexual systems, costs/benefits of PSH, and socioecological attributes of Lysmata, considered in the context of a phylogeny of the group, will be necessary to understand how PSH evolved in Lysmata and why it has not evolved in other groups of protandric carideans.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.