Abstract

Maturing degree-days, gonadal histology, and changes in serum sex steroids (progesterone, P; testosterone, T; and 17β-estradiol, E2) were examined in maturing and mature spring migrant Caspian lamprey Caspiomyzon wagneri (Kessler, 1870) in the Shirud River (southern Caspian Sea). Blood and gonad samples were collected from ten fish when they first entered the river (maturing stage) and from ten fish that showed spawning readiness after being held in cages in the river (mature stage). The maturing degree-days of Caspian lamprey from the start of upstream migration to maturation was 208–470°C.day. Serum P and E2 concentrations in maturing females were significantly higher than in maturing males, but in the mature stage, serum P and E2 concentrations of females were lower than males. In both stages, there were no differences in serum concentration of T between females and males. In both males and females, P increased significantly with maturation; T levels likewise appeared to increase, but the difference was not significant. E2 increased significantly with maturation in males, but females showed a significant decrease. Maturing females had similar stage gonads with the germinal vesicle in the polar position. Maturing males had testes that primarily contained secondary spermatocytes with an occasional occurrence of spermatozoa. These results suggest that males mature earlier than females, which is a pattern similar to that found in the sea lamprey.

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