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Gonadal Stage and Sex Steroid Correlations in Siberian Sturgeon, <i>Acipenser baeri</i>, Habituated to a Semitropical Environment
10
Citations
22
References
2011
Year
SpermatogenesisBreeding BehaviorFertilityComparative EndocrinologyReproductive HealthSexual SelectionFemale Reproductive FunctionReproductive BiologyReproduction ResponseReproductive EndocrinologyReproductive PhysiologyFemale InfertilityGonadal DevelopmentPublic HealthSiberian SturgeonPlasma ConcentrationsEndocrinologyBiologyDevelopmental BiologyEvolutionary BiologyPhysiologyGonadal StageSex Steroid CorrelationsMedicineReproductive HormoneGonadotropin Biology
Stages of gonadal development, in association with plasma concentrations of the sex steroids 17β‐estradiol (E2), progesterone (P4), testosterone (T), and 11‐ketotestosterone (11‐KT), were investigated for a single time point during a natural breeding season in 7‐yr‐old Siberian sturgeon, Acipenser baeri Brandt, exposed lifelong to a warmwater environment. Among females, examination of gonadal tissue showed variation in ovarian stage, with 12.5, 47.5, 22.5, and 17.5% of females found at Stages 2 (previtellogenic), 3 (early vitellogenic), 4 (mid‐vitellogenic), and 5 (migratory nucleus), respectively. Although patterns varied among the hormones, plasma concentrations of E2, T, and 11‐KT became increasingly elevated in females as maturation progressed. On the basis of histological criteria, males were classified as either premeiotic (quiescent) or meiotic and 50% of the males sampled were found at each stage. Significant elevations in circulating concentrations of plasma E2 and T were observed in meiotic versus premeiotic males, and there was a rise in plasma 11‐KT concentration that approached significance ( P = 0.056).
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