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1 School of Fisheries, WH-10, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98115
2 Department of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, I.C. Darling Center, University of Maine, Walpole, Maine 04573
3 Great Lakes Fishery Laboratory, Fish and Wildlife Service, 1451 Green Road, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48105
Triploid soft-shell clams (Mya arenaria) were produced by inhibiting polar body extrusion with cytochalasin B immediately after fertilization. Diploid and triploid clams grown in suspended tray culture were examined histologically during the reproductive season of their second year. Most diploids had matured by the end of May and displayed normal gametogenic development in every individual. Triploids did not mature and most had undeveloped gonads. The few triploid females which developed some oocytes by the end of May had abnormal maturation. Triploids were 77% female as judged by the presence of oocytes; another 16% were female-like and may have been intersexes; the sex of 6% could not be identified because there was no sexual differentiation. Sex determination in this species, based on the sex ratio in triploids, best fits the model of an X:autosome balance mechanism as exemplified in some insect species.
Submitted on April 15, 1985
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