Literature DB >> 17897586

Translocation reverses birth sex ratio bias depending on its timing during gestation: evidence for the action of two sex-allocation mechanisms.

W L Linklater1.   

Abstract

Many sex allocation mechanisms are proposed but rarely have researchers considered and tested more than one at a time. Four facultative birth sex ratio (BSR) adjustment mechanisms are considered: (1) hormone-induced conception bias; (2) sex-differential embryo death from excess glucose metabolism; (3) sex-differential embryo death from embryo-uterine developmental asynchrony; and (4) pregnancy hormone suppression and resource deprivation. All mechanisms could be switched on by the corticoadrenal stress response. A total of 104 female rhinoceroses (Rhinocerotidae), translocated from 1961 to 2004 at different stages of gestation or conceived soon after arrival in captivity, were used to test for a reversal in BSR bias as evidence for the action of multiple sex-allocation mechanisms. Translocation induced a statistically significant BSR reversal between early gestation (86% male births from 0 to 0.19 gestation) and mid-gestation (38% male from 0.2 to 0.79 gestation). Captivity also induced a strongly male-biased (67% male) BSR for conceptions after arrival in captivity. The results indicate the action of at least two sex-allocation mechanisms operating in sequence, confirm the important role of sex-differential embryo death around implantation and of stress in sex allocation, and lend support to suggestions that sex-differential glucose metabolism by the preimplantation embryo likely plays a role in facultative BSR adjustment.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17897586     DOI: 10.1071/rd07027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reprod Fertil Dev        ISSN: 1031-3613            Impact factor:   2.311


  3 in total

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Authors:  Brett A Haines; Francesca Barradale; Beth L Dumont
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2021-11-05       Impact factor: 4.402

2.  Maternal effects obscure condition-dependent sex allocation in changing environments.

Authors:  A M Edwards; E Z Cameron; E Wapstra; J McEvoy
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2019-04-03       Impact factor: 2.963

3.  Effects of dehorning on population productivity in four Namibia sub-populations of black rhinoceros (Diceros bicornis bicornis).

Authors:  Lucy C Chimes; Piet Beytell; Jeff R Muntifering; Birgit Kötting; Vikki Neville
Journal:  Eur J Wildl Res       Date:  2022-08-15
  3 in total

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