“…Since then, many studies have reported an effect of temperature on sex determination in various fish families, with different levels of domestication (Devlin & Nagahama, 2002; Ospina‐Álvarez & Piferrer, 2008). This includes species domesticated for many generations, like zebrafish Danio rerio (Hamilton 1822) (Uchida et al ., 2004), olive flounder Paralichthys olivaceus (Schmidt 1904) (Tabata, 1995), European sea bass Dicentrarchus labrax L. (Piferrer et al ., 2005), goldfish Carassius auratus L. (Goto‐Kazeto et al ., 2006), Nile tilapia Oreochromis niloticus L. (Baroiller et al ., 1995), pike silverside Chirostoma estor Jordan 1880 (Corona‐Herrera et al ., 2016) and African spiny catfish Clarias gariepinus (Burchell 1822) (Santi et al ., 2016). Similar results were obtained for the F1 progeny of wild populations of pejerrey Odontesthes bonariensis (Valenciennes 1835) (Strüssmann et al ., 1996), O. niloticus (Bezault et al ., 2007), spiny chromis damselfish Acanthochromis polyacanthus (Bleeker 1855) (Donelson & Munday, 2015), Poecilia melanogaster Günther 1866, 35 species of the genus Apistogramma (Römer & Beisenherz, 1996), and even the F2 of wild atipa Hoplosternum littorale (Hancock 1828) (Hostache et al ., 1995) and A. polyacanthus (Donelson & Munday, 2015).…”