Environmental sex reversal, Trojan sex genes, and sex ratio adjustment: conditions and population consequences.


Autoria(s): Stelkens R. B.; Wedekind C.
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Abstract The great diversity of sex determination mechanisms in animals and plants ranges from genetic sex determination (GSD, e.g. mammals, birds, and most dioecious plants) to environmental sex determination (ESD, e.g. many reptiles) and includes a mixture of both, for example when an individual's genetically determined sex is environmentally reversed during ontogeny (ESR, environmental sex reversal, e.g. many fish and amphibia). ESD and ESR can lead to widely varying and unstable population sex ratios. Populations exposed to conditions such as endocrine-active substances or temperature shifts may decline over time due to skewed sex ratios, a scenario that may become increasingly relevant with greater anthropogenic interference on watercourses. Continuous exposure of populations to factors causing ESR could lead to the extinction of genetic sex factors and may render a population dependent on the environmental factors that induce the sex change. However, ESR also presents opportunities for population management, especially if the Y or W chromosome is not, or not severely, degenerated. This seems to be the case in many amphibians and fish. Population growth or decline in such species can potentially be controlled through the introduction of so-called Trojan sex genes carriers, individuals that possess sex chromosomes or genes opposite from what their phenotype predicts. Here, we review the conditions for ESR, its prevalence in natural populations, the resulting physiological and reproductive consequences, and how these may become instrumental for population management.

Identificador

http://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_9ECF7BCB8864

isbn:1365-294X[electronic]

pmid:20088884

doi:10.1111/j.1365-294X.2010.04526.x

isiid:000273953400003

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

Molecular ecology, vol. 19, no. 4, pp. 627-646

Palavras-Chave #conservation; environmental sex reversal; population management; sex determina-tion; sex ratio; Trojan sex genes
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/review

article