Nature Publishing Group, publisher of Nature, and other science journals and reference works
Nature
my account e-alerts subscribe register
   
Monday 23 November 2009
Journal Home
Current Issue
AOP
Archive
Download PDF
References
Export citation
Export references
Send to a friend
More articles like this

Letters to Nature
Nature 245, 332 - 335 (12 October 1973); doi:10.1038/245332a0

Social Control of Adult Size in Males of Xiphophorus variatus

RICHARD L. BOROWSKY

Department of Biology, New York University, University Heights, New York 10453

As in other species of poeciliid fish, male Xiphophorus variatus (Pisces, Poeciliidae) virtually cease growth at maturity. The size of an adult male, then, is determined by its average growth rate before it reaches maturity and the age at which this happens. The latter factor is under social control in this species. When I raised juvenile males in groups, they usually started to mature in sequence, largest first, and subsequently maturing males did not usually reach maturity until they were longer than all previously matured males. As a result, the juvenile size order was negatively correlated with adult size order. When the fish in a group were isolated from one another such patterns disappeared indicating that some degree of social interaction was necessary for their maintenance1.

------------------

References
1. Borowsky, R. L., thesis, Yale Univ. (1969).
2. Borowsky, R. L., Physiol. Zool., 46, 22 (1973).
3. Fishelson, L., Nature, 227, 90 (1970).
4. Robertson, D. R., Science, N. Y., 177, 1007 (1972).
5. Barlow, G. W., Z. Tierpsychol., 27, 779 (1970).



© 1973 Nature Publishing Group
Privacy Policy