Sex determination in the oyster Crassostrea gigas - A large longitudinal study of population sex ratios and individual sex changes

被引:22
作者
Broquard, Coralie [1 ,2 ]
Martinez, Anne-Sophie [2 ]
Maurouard, Elise [1 ]
Lamy, Jean-Baptiste [1 ]
Degremont, Lionel [1 ]
机构
[1] IFREMER, RBE SG2M LGPMM, La Tremblade, France
[2] Univ Caen Normandie, Lab Biol Organismes & Ecosyst Aquat BOREA, MNHN, SU,UA,CNRS,IRD, CS 14032, F-14032 Caen 05, France
关键词
sex-ratio; Sex change; Oysters; Hermaphroditism; Crassostrea gigas; PACIFIC OYSTER; REPRODUCTIVE-CYCLE; ENVIRONMENT; DIFFERENTIATION; HERMAPHRODITISM; TEMPERATURE; PLASTICITY; SEXUALITY; EVOLUTION; VIRGINICA;
D O I
10.1016/j.aquaculture.2019.734555
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
Understanding sex determination in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas, a sequential hermaphrodite, can provide prospective on the evolution of sex-determining systems for comparative reproduction from an evolutionary perspective. Surprisingly, this mechanism is still poorly understood. To date, sex ratio and sex change have never been studied at the individual level for a large size group and long-term monitoring. To this purpose, we performed an ambitious individual long-term follow-up (6 years) on a large population (cohort 1: 7488 oysters) produced from wild oysters, as well as for a second population produced from the cohort 1 (cohort 2: 4320 oysters). All oysters were individually sexed from 2014 to 2019. For the cohort 1, our results showed a significantly female-biased sex ratio each year, ranging from 61 to 73% for the cohort 1. The proportion of oysters exhibiting sex change between the first two breeding seasons was 34% and decreased each year, ending at 9% between years 5 and 6. From the initial population, 1386 oysters were sexed six years in a row. Among them, 58% were sequential hermaphrodites, within which 32% changed sex once (19% protandric and 13% protogynic), 19% twice, 5% three times, 1% four times and 0.1% five times. In contrast, 42% never exhibited a sex change, within which 34% were potentially true females and 8% potentially true males. However, a logistic regression model indicates that those oysters could experience one sex reversal in subsequent years resulting that all oysters of our population of C. gigas would be sequential hermaphrodites. Similar results were observed for the cohort 2, although the proportion of sequential hermaphrodite was higher than the one observed for cohort 1. It is supposed that a genetic basis exist for sex change in C. gigas. Our work participates to unravel the barriers existing about the sequential hermaphroditism, the protandry and the sexual system in C. gigas, still currently debated.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 59 条
  • [51] Bending Genders: The Biology of Natural Sex Change in Fish
    Todd, Erica V.
    Liu, Hui
    Muncaster, Simon
    Gemmell, Neil J.
    [J]. SEXUAL DEVELOPMENT, 2016, 10 (5-6) : 223 - 241
  • [52] NATURAL-SELECTION OF PARENTAL ABILITY TO VARY SEX-RATIO OF OFFSPRING
    TRIVERS, RL
    WILLARD, DE
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1973, 179 (4068) : 90 - 92
  • [53] Sexual selection favors female-biased sex ratios: The balance between the opposing forces of sex-ratio selection and sexual selection
    Wade, MJ
    Shuster, SM
    Demuth, JP
    [J]. AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2003, 162 (04) : 403 - 414
  • [54] When males and hermaphrodites coexist: a review of androdioecy in animals
    Weeks, Stephen C.
    Benvenuto, Chiara
    Reed, Sadie K.
    [J]. INTEGRATIVE AND COMPARATIVE BIOLOGY, 2006, 46 (04) : 449 - 464
  • [55] Reproductive Responses and Detoxification of Estuarine Oyster Crassostrea hongkongensis under Metal Stress: A Seasonal Study
    Weng, Nanyan
    Wang, Wen-Xiong
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 49 (05) : 3119 - 3127
  • [56] Production of inbred larvae through self-fertilization using oocytes and cryopreserved sperm from the same individuals after sex reversal in eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica
    Yang, Huiping
    Wang, Yan
    Guo, Ximing
    Tiersch, Terrence R.
    [J]. AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, 2015, 46 (09) : 2153 - 2165
  • [57] Effects of size and gregariousness on individual sex in a natural population of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas
    Yasuoka, Noriko
    Yusa, Yoichi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLLUSCAN STUDIES, 2016, 82 : 485 - 491
  • [58] Causes of variation in sex ratio and modes of sex determination in the Mollusca - an overview
    Yusa, Yoichi
    [J]. AMERICAN MALACOLOGICAL BULLETIN, 2007, 23 (1-2) : 89 - 98
  • [59] Genomic Analysis of the Pacific Oyster (Crassostrea gigas) Reveals Possible Conservation of Vertebrate Sex Determination in a Mollusc
    Zhang, Na
    Xu, Fei
    Guo, Ximing
    [J]. G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS, 2014, 4 (11): : 2207 - 2217