Eggs from congeneric gonochoristic and parthenogenetic whiptail lizards were incubated at various temperatures. There was no significant deviation from a sex ratio of one-half in the sexual species at any temperature, whereas no males were produced in the parthenogenetic species. Temperature-depende
Embryonic origin of mate choice in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination
✍ Scribed by Oliver Putz; David Crews
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 256 KB
- Volume
- 48
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0012-1630
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Individual differences in the adult sexual behavior of vertebrates are rooted in the fetal environment. In the leopard gecko (Eublepharis macularius), a species with temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD), hatchling sex ratios differ between incubation temperatures, as does sexuality in same‐sex animals. This variation can primarily be ascribed to the temperature having direct organizing actions on the brain. Here we demonstrate that embryonic temperature can affect adult mate choice in the leopard gecko. Given the simultaneous choice between two females from different incubation temperatures (30.0 and 34.0° C), males from one incubation temperature (30.0° C) preferred the female from 34.0° C, while males from another incubation temperature (32.5° C) preferred the female from 30.0° C. We suggest that this difference in mate choice is due to an environmental influence on brain development leading to differential perception of opposite‐sex individuals. This previously unrecognized modulator of adult mate choice lends further support to the view that mate choice is best understood in the context of an individual's entire life‐history. Thus, sexual selection results from a combination of the female's as well as the male's life history. Female attractiveness and male choice therefore are complementary. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Dev Psychobiol 48: 29–38, 2006.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Sex determination in egg-laying amniotes may be fundamentally different from that of placental mammals. The mammalian ovary differentiates normally in the absence of estrogen, whereas estrogen seems to be crucial for proper ovarian development in birds, reptiles, and lower vertebrates. Estrogens are
## Abstract Some previous studies indicate that the local hydric environment may influence sex determination in turtles with temperature‐dependent sex determination. In this study, the effect of a daily application of 0.77 mL of ddH~2~0 per egg using an incubation temperature of 29.1°C was examined
The extent to which variation within and between the sexes can be assigned to genes vs. environment is problematic, because, in most vertebrates, males and females differ genetically. However, factors other than sex chromosomes and the consequent sex-typical gonadal hormone secretions may play impor
## Abstract Dmrt1 has been implicated as an important factor in sex determination in all classes of vertebrates, including reptiles with temperature‐dependent sex determination (TSD). Specifically, early embryonic expression of Dmrt1 appears to be an integral part of normal testicular development i