| Literature DB >> 28251305 |
Tomoki Sunobe1, Tetsuya Sado2, Kiyoshi Hagiwara3, Hisaya Manabe4, Toshiyuki Suzuki5, Yasuhisa Kobayashi6, Makoto Sakurai7, Shin-Ichi Dewa8, Midori Matsuoka9, Akihiko Shinomiya9, Kazuya Fukuda10, Masaki Miya2.
Abstract
Size-advantage and low-density models have been used to explain how mating systems favor hermaphroditism or gonochorism. However, these models do not indicate historical transitions in sexuality. Here, we investigate the evolution of bidirectional sex change and gonochorism by phylogenetic analysis using the mitochondrial gene of the gobiids Trimma (31 species), Priolepis (eight species), and Trimmatom (two species). Trimma and Priolepis formed a clade within the sister group Trimmatom. Gonadal histology and rearing experiments revealed that Trimma marinae, Trimma nasa, and Trimmatom spp. were gonochoric, whereas all other Trimma and Priolepis spp. were bidirectional sex changers or inferred ones. A maximum-likelihood reconstruction analysis demonstrated that the common ancestor of the three genera was gonochoristic. Bidirectional sex change probably evolved from gonochorism in a common ancestor of Trimma and Priolepis. As the gonads of bidirectional sex changers simultaneously contain mature ovarian and immature testicular components or vice versa, individuals are always potentially capable of functioning as females or males, respectively. Monogamy under low-density conditions may have been the ecological condition for the evolution of bidirectional sex change in a common ancestor. As T. marinae and T. nasa are a monophyletic group, gonochorism should have evolved from bidirectional sex change in a common ancestor.Entities:
Keywords: Bidirectional sex change; Gobiidae; Low-density model; Mating system; Phylogenetic analysis; Size-advantage model
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28251305 PMCID: PMC5332495 DOI: 10.1007/s00114-017-1434-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Naturwissenschaften ISSN: 0028-1042
Fig. 1Urogenital papillae of female (a) and male (b) in Trimma kudoi. Scale 1 mm
Results of the Trimma caesiura, Trimma maiandros, and Trimma naudei rearing experiments
| Individual name (mm TL) | Date of spawning | Sex role | Date of removal | Date of spawning | Sex role | Date of return | Date of spawning | Sex role | TL at end |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||||
| TC1 (31.0) | Male | May 18 | June 7 | Male | 35.0 | ||||
| TC2 (26.5) | May 9 | Female | Male | June 28 | Female | 33.5 | |||
| TC3 (23.0) | May 14 | Female | May 24 | Female | June 10 | Female | 27.6 | ||
|
| |||||||||
| TM1 (27.0) | Male | May 16 | May 23 | Male | 29.0 | ||||
| TM2 (26.0) | May 16 | Female | Male | May 31 | Female | 27.5 | |||
| TM3 (23.0) | April 29 | Female | May 19 | Female | May 23 | Female | 25.5 | ||
|
| |||||||||
| TN1 (34.0) | Male | May 13 | June 7 | June 26 | Female | 35.5 | |||
| TN2 (33.5) | May 7 | Female | Male | Male | 37.0 | ||||
| TN3 (32.0) | May 2 | Female | May 16 | Female | June 8 | Female | 34.0 | ||
| TN4 (28.0) | May 1 | Female | May 20 | Female | June 8 | Female | 31.0 | ||
Results of the Trimmatom sp. rearing experiments
| Individual name (mm TL) | Shape of urogenital papilla at start | Date of spawning | Sex role | Exchange | Individual name | Shape of urogenital papilla at end | Gonad histology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tom1 (23.0) | Tapered | June 30 | Male | Pairing with the same sex | Tom1 | Tapered | Testis |
| Tom2 (22.0) | Bulbous | Female | Tom3 | Tapered | Testis | ||
| Tom3 (23.0) | Tapered | July 30 | Male | Tom2 | Bulbous | Ovary | |
| Tom4 (20.5) | Bulbous | Female | Tom4 | Bulbous | Ovary | ||
| Tom5 (28.0) | Tapered | May 30 | Male | Pairing with the same sex | Tom5 | Tapered | Testis |
| Tom6 (28.0) | Bulbous | Female | Tom7 | Tapered | Testis | ||
| Tom7 (25.0) | Tapered | June 2 | Male | Tom6 | Bulbous | Ovary | |
| Tom8 (24.0) | Bulbous | Female | Tom8 | Bulbous | Ovary | ||
| Tom9 (24.0) | Tapered | July 21 | Male | Pairing with the same sex | Tom9 | Tapered | Testis |
| Tom10 (24.0) | Bulbous | Female | Tom11 | Tapered | Testis | ||
| Tom11 (22.0) | Tapered | July 25 | Male | Tom10 | Bulbous | Ovary | |
| Tom12 (23.0) | Bulbous | Female | Tom12 | Bulbous | Ovary |
Fig. 2Phylogenetic tree for the maximum likelihood analysis and reconstruction of the evolution of bidirectional sex change and gonochorism. Numbers next to the branches indicate bootstrap probabilities ≥40% based on 1000 replications
Fig. 3Gonadal structures of females (a, c, e) and males (b, d, f) in Trimma caesiura (a, b), Trimma hayashii (c, d), and Trimma sheppardi (e, f). O ovary, T testis, AGS accessory gonadal structure. Scale 0.5 mm
Fig. 4Gonadal structures of females (a, c, e, g) and males (b, d, f, h) in Trimma marinae (a, b), Trimma nasa (c, d), Trimmatom sp. (e, f) and Trimmatom pharus (g, h). O ovary, T testis, AGS accessory gonadal structure. Scale 0.5 mm (a, b, c, d, e, g) and 0.2 mm (f, h)