Abstract

To test the hypotheses explaining the sex expression of the immobile snail Quoyula monodonta, which inhabits the surfaces of the branching coral, Pocillopora eydouxi, the size, sex, gonad development, penis length and the composition of neighboring individuals were investigated between November 1994 and August 1995 in southern Taiwan. Although the snails often aggregated and formed patches, more than 50% were solitary. Females were larger than males both within a snail patch and in the whole population, but the overlap in size range was wide. The males were generally accompanied by females, whereas most females were solitary. Females were rarely (6%) found in the same patch with another female, but 35% of the males had male neighbors. Most juveniles found were also solitary. The composition pattern within a patch cannot be explained by random sampling. Gonad development of an individual was dependent on the presence and the sex of its neighbors within the same patch; the penis length of males also depended on the presence of neighbors. These phenomena suggest that an individual is sensitive to its neighbors. No individuals in the process of sex change were ever found from histological studies of the gonads. Neither the hypothesis that the sex of recruits determines their habitats, nor the hypothesis that there is strict protandric sex-change is supported. The results, however, are all clearly compatible with the hypothesis that the snail has labile sex expression. In the presence of existing females in a patch, recruits are more likely to develop into males, whereas recruits starting a new patch grow to a larger size before developing into females directly. The labile sex expression of Q. monodonta is the only such report in neogastropods.

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