Environmental regulation of sex determination in reptiles
- 1 December 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences
- Vol. 322 (1208) , 19-39
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1988.0111
Abstract
The various patterns of environmental sex determination in squamates, chelonians and crocodilians are described. High temperatures produce males in lizards and crocodiles but females in chelonians. Original experiments on the effects of incubation at 30 °C (100% females) or 33 °C (100% males) on development inAlligator mississippiensisare described. These include an investigation of the effect of exposing embryos briefly to a different incubation temperature on the sex ratio at hatching, and a study of the effects of 30 °C and 33 °C on growth and development of alligator embryos and gonads. A 7-day pulse of one temperature on the background of another was insufficient to alter the sex ratio dramatically. Incubation at 33 °C increased the rate of growth and development of alligator embryos. In particular, differentiation of the gonad at 33 °C was enhanced compared with 30 °C. A hypothesis is developed to explain the mechanism of temperature-dependent sex determination (TSD) in crocodilians. The processes of primary sex differentiation are considered to involve exposure to a dose of some male-determining factor during a specific quantum of developmental time during early incubation. The gene that encodes for the male- determining factor is considered to have an optimum temperature (33 °C). Any change in the temperature affects the expression o f this gene and affects the dose or quantum embryos are exposed to. In these cases there is production of females by default. The phylogenetic implications of TSD for crocodilians, and reptiles in particular, are related to the life history of the animal from conception to sexual maturity. Those animals that develop under optimal conditions grow fastest and largest and become male. A general association between the size of an animal and its sex is proposed for several types of vertebrate.This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sex Determination and Sex Ratios inCrocodylus palustrisAmerican Zoologist, 1989
- Sex reversal by estradiol in three reptilian ordersGeneral and Comparative Endocrinology, 1988
- Incubation temperatures, sex ratios and sex determination in a population of Nile crocodiles (Crocodylus niloticus)Journal of Zoology, 1987
- Skewed Sex Ratios for Adult and Hatchling Bullsnakes, Pituophis melanoleucus, in NebraskaIchthyology & Herpetology, 1985
- A Low Threshold Temperature for Sexual Differentiation in the Painted Turtle, Chrysemys pictaIchthyology & Herpetology, 1984
- Temperature-Controlled Sex Determination in the Sea Turtle Lepidochelys olivaceaJournal of Herpetology, 1983
- Temperature of egg incubation determines sex in Alligator mississippiensisNature, 1982
- Sex Determination in ReptilesThe Quarterly Review of Biology, 1980
- Sex Determination in Birds and MammalsNature, 1971
- The chromosomes of the order CrocodiliaCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1970