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Mating system and protandrous sex change in the lizard flathead, Inegocia japonica (Platycephalidae)

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Abstract

Mating system and protandrous sex change of the lizard flathead Inegocia japonica were investigated off Nagashima, Kagoshima, Japan. The reproductive season of this species was estimated to be from June to September by a fluctuation of gonadsomatic index from monthly sampling data. The hermaphrodite fish, having testicular and ovarian parts, were collected from February to December, indicating that the sex change occurred in both reproductive and nonreproductive seasons. Females were larger than males and hermaphrodites. Moreover, five cases of the sex change from male to female were directly confirmed during the 1995–1997 field census in the behavioral observation area. Home ranges, where no aggressive interaction took place among any individuals, overlapped within and between sexes. Seven pair spawnings observed in the area were not of the same individual combination, and the size of pair fish was likely to be random. This species may thus have a promiscuous mating system, i.e., random pairing, which favors protandry as predicted in the size-advantage model.

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Correspondence to Tomoki Sunobe.

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Shinomiya, A., Yamada, M. & Sunobe, T. Mating system and protandrous sex change in the lizard flathead, Inegocia japonica (Platycephalidae). Ichthyol Res 50, 383–386 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10228-003-0182-6

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10228-003-0182-6

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