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HERO ID
6970425
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
The influence of social environment on sex determination in harlequin shrimp (Hymenocera picta : Decapoda, Gnathophyllidae)
Author(s)
Fiedler, GC; ,
Year
2002
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Journal of Crustacean Biology
ISSN:
0278-0372
EISSN:
1981-2002
Publisher
CRUSTACEAN SOC
Location
SAN ANTONIO
Page Numbers
750-761
Web of Science Id
WOS:000179128800007
Abstract
Harlequin shrimp, Hymenocera picta, are monogamous and pair-bonding, and are usually found in isolated singles and pairs in the field. The apparent rarity of this species in their habitat and high levels of aggression between consexuals suggests the possibility of sonic sort of plasticity in their primary sex determination. In this study, the influence of social environment upon primary sex determination in H. picta was examined experimentally in the laboratory. Naive juveniles were placed in three novel social environments: paired juveniles, single juveniles, and adult/juvenile pairs. Spacing behavior and the onset of external differentiation were observed during long-term experiments for each social treatment. Gonadal development was also observed. Spacing behavior of paired shrimp reflected the sexual composition of social groups; high intrapair distance (IPD) for same-sex pairs and low IPD for opposite-sex pairs. Sex determination results were not so clear. Two of the three paired juvenile replicates displayed phenotype frequencies different from those expected from a random sample of gonochoristic organisms with a 1:1 sex ratio. However, the third replicate and the combined frequencies did not show any statistical difference from the hypothetical random sample. Furthermore, single juveniles and those paired Milt adults expressed sex in nearly 1:1 ratios, regardless of the sex of adult conspecifies. Histological examination of juvenile shrimp confirmed that sex was determined as early as four weeks after larval metamorphosis. Therefore, social environment had no clear effect upon sexual phenotype expressed. However, single females attained puberty at a significantly greater age and larger size than did females paired with males. Hence for H. picta, social environment had a measurable effect on the timing of female puberty. This is the first demonstration of this phenomenon in decapod Crustacea.
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