2009
DOI: 10.1159/000223077
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Environmental Effects on Fish Sex Determination and Differentiation

Abstract: Environmental factors affect the sex ratio of many gonochoristic fish species. They can either determine sex or influence sex differentiation. Temperature is the most common environmental cue affecting sex but density, pH and hypoxia have also been shown to influence the sex ratio of fish species from very divergent orders. Differential growth or developmental rate is suggested to influence sex differentiation in sea bass. Studies in most fish species used domestic strains reared under controlled conditions. I… Show more

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Cited by 273 publications
(242 citation statements)
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References 238 publications
(195 reference statements)
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“…Climatic instability, including the periodic onset of El Niño events and drier monsoon seasons (63) accompanying increasing temperatures in South East Asia, may therefore augment population impacts on zebrafish. Other environmental stressors likely to accompany projected climate change, including reduced nutrition, overcrowding, and, in aquatic environments, increasing acidification and reduced dissolved oxygen, may also generate male-skewed sex ratios in fish (25,26) and other taxa, including amphibians (22) and reptiles (51).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Climatic instability, including the periodic onset of El Niño events and drier monsoon seasons (63) accompanying increasing temperatures in South East Asia, may therefore augment population impacts on zebrafish. Other environmental stressors likely to accompany projected climate change, including reduced nutrition, overcrowding, and, in aquatic environments, increasing acidification and reduced dissolved oxygen, may also generate male-skewed sex ratios in fish (25,26) and other taxa, including amphibians (22) and reptiles (51).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, in lizards (17,18), fish (21), and some amphibians (22), temperature elevation tends to induce male development and male-biased sex ratios can dramatically reduce population fitness (23,24). Sexual differentiation in these animals is also strongly influenced by chemicals that disrupt hormone systems (25)(26)(27)(28). Some endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) are highly potent pollutants, and exposure concentrations occurring in natural surface waters have been shown to affect reproductive development negatively in reptiles (29), amphibians (28), and fish (30,31).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some reptile species have sex chromosome systems that can be overridden by temperature 28, 29; these dual systems are extremely labile, able to change rapidly to TSD systems and even between ZW and XY 30, 31. Similar GSD‐TSD transitions may be common in some fish and may also facilitate changes in sex determination 32, 33, 34.…”
Section: How Are Sex Chromosomes Rearranged or Replaced?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, modeling sex determination in the context of QTL haplotypes (Figure 3) allows us to explain sex in B82% of F 2 offspring. We cannot discount the effect of environmental influences on sex determination in fishes (Baroiller et al, 2009), and we accept that these effects in cichlids in particular are not well described. The conditions in which we conducted our intercross experiment were well controlled in terms of light, temperature and other physical water parameters.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%