Editorial Type:
Article Category: Research Article
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Online Publication Date: 10 Sept 2008

A Sex Difference in Seasonal Timing of Birth in a Livebearing Fish

Page Range: 673 – 679
DOI: 10.1643/CE-07-168
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Abstract

Sex differences in seasonal timing include differences in hatch- or birth-date distribution and differences in the timing of migration or maturation such as protandrous arrival timing (PAT), which is early male arrival at breeding sites. I describe a novel form of protandrous arrival timing, as a sex difference in birth-date distribution in a live-bearing fish (Dwarf Perch, Micrometrus minimus). In this species, birth coincides with arrival at breeding sites because newborn males are sexually active. A series of samples of pregnant females and young of year was collected in Tomales Bay, CA. I analyzed the daily age record in otoliths to estimate the conception date of broods and the age that young-of-year individuals were born. Males were born at a younger age than females, as indicated by the daily age record and also by the predominance of females in broods from which some young had already been born, which was a common occurrence in pregnant females with older embryos. Sex ratio of broods varied with conception date such that early-season broods were predominantly male, possibly as a result of temperature-dependent sex determination. The combined effects of the sex difference in age at birth and seasonal shift in sex ratio were to shift the mean birth date of males relative to females by five days. The most likely ultimate explanation for PAT in the Dwarf Perch is that it arises from exploitation (scramble) competition for mating opportunities among recently-born young-of-year males.

Copyright: 2008 by the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists
Figure 1
Figure 1

The embryo age and sex ratio of parturient broods. (A) Mean embryo age (±SE) against residual fecundity and absolute fecundity. The lower X-axis is residual fecundity (difference between observed and predicted number of embryos in the brood, in 4-embryo classes; see text for explanation); because residual fecundity decreases when a portion of the brood is born and a portion is retained, the X-axis is reversed. The upper X-axis represents mean absolute fecundity for each residual fecundity class, reported separately for each female age class as age 1/age 2. (B) Mean sex ratio against residual fecundity and absolute fecundity. X-axes constructed as in (A). Sex ratio is plotted as proportion of the brood that is male (±SE). Sample size is indicated for each data point, reported separately for each female age class as age 1/age 2.


Figure 2
Figure 2

Brood sex ratio and conception date. Mean sex ratio (±SE) is plotted against conception date in seven-day classes. Sample size is indicated for each sex ratio data point.


Figure 3
Figure 3

Sex differences in birth-date distribution. Cumulative probability distributions representing the probability that birth date is less than or equal to the X-axis value are represented by sex. Birth date is divided into seven-day classes. (A) Prospective estimate from embryos. (B) Retrospective estimate from YOY.


Contributor Notes

Associate Editor: S. A. Schaefer.

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-3043; E-mail: eric.schultz@uconn.edu.
Received: 08 Aug 2007
Accepted: 20 Jan 2008
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