Abstract

Adult female African catfish, Clarias gariepinus, were manipulated to enter the phase of ovarian recrudescence by induced ovulation and stripping. These females were exposed to various conspecific stimuli for 33 days. At the end of the experimental period, gonadosomatic indexes (GSIs) were higher in females which had received holding water from a mixed-sex population than in comparable controls. The effect was abolished when recipient females had been rendered anosmic, indicating the presence of chemical substances perceptible through olfaction. Fecundity estimates and histological analysis suggest that the increase in GSI due to pheromonal stimulation is caused by both an increased recruitment of oocytes into the stage of exogenous vitellogenesis and by an enhanced deposition of yolk material in the oocytes. It is concluded that male C. gariepinus release pheromones with a stimulatory effect on vitellogenesis. Neither anosmia itself nor metabolites in holding water affected ovarian recrudescence or body weight increase. The biological significance of such pheromones is discussed in the context of observations on reproduction of C. gariepinus made in the natural environment.

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