Why Be a Both‐ways Sex Changer?
- 12 January 1995
- Vol. 101 (4) , 301-307
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0310.1995.tb00367.x
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sex change in either direction by growth-rate advantage in the monogamous coral goby, Paragobiodon echinocephalusBehavioral Ecology, 1994
- Protandrous Hermaphroditism in the Tropical Shrimp Athanas indicus (Decapoda: Caridea), a Symbiont of Sea UrchinsJournal of Crustacean Biology, 1993
- Size‐assortative Monogamy and Paternal Egg Care in a Coral Goby Paragobiodon echinocephalusEthology, 1993
- Hermaphroditism and sexual function inCirrhitichthys aureus and the other Japanese hawkfishes (Cirrhitidae: Teleostei)Japanese Journal of Ichthyology, 1992
- Sex Change and Population Dynamics in Arisaema (Araceae) II. An Examination on the Evolutionary Stability of Sex Changing Schedule of A. serratum (Thunb.) SchottPlant Species Biology, 1990
- Patterns of gonad structure in hermaphroditic gobies (Teleostei Gobiidae)Environmental Biology of Fishes, 1990
- Sex Change by a Polychaete: Effects of Social and Reproductive CostsEcology, 1986
- The Adaptive Significance of Sexual Lability in Plants Using Atriplex canescens as a Principal ExampleAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 1984
- Sex change in plants: Old and new observations and new hypothesesOecologia, 1980
- The Evolution of Hermaphroditism Among AnimalsThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1969