“…In most animals, the traditional view was that sex determination results from (a) genotypic sex determination (GSD), in which sex is determined at the time of fertilization by genetic factors independent of environmental influence or (b) environmental sex determination (ESD), in which sex is determined by environmental factors that act after fertilization [Ciofi and Swingland, 1997]. ESD has been studied in a variety of vertebrates and invertebrates including fishes [Conover, 1984;Conover et al, 1992;Beamish, 1993;Baroiller et al, 1996;Luckenbach et al, 2003], crustaceans [Naylor et al, 1988;Bergström, 1997;McCabe and Dunn, 1997;Rigaud et al, 1997], reptiles [Bull, 1980;Ferguson and Joanen, 1983;Deeming and Ferguson, 1988;Ewert and Nelson, 1991;Janzen and Paukstis, 1991;Lang and Andrews, 1994], nematodes, rotifers, polychaetes, and echiurids [Korpelainen, 1990].…”