Topic
Gonad
About: Gonad is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 3781 publications have been published within this topic receiving 121916 citations. The topic is also known as: human gonad & reproductive gland.
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TL;DR: The present paper is an account of some of the investigations on the biology of the perch in Windermere, which are being conducted in connexion with a trap-fishery experiment, which revealed the relative complexity of the interrelationships of length, weight and condition.
Abstract: The present paper is an account of some of the investigations on the biology of the perch (Perca fluviatilis Linn.) in Windermere, which are being conducted in connexion with a trap-fishery experiment (Worthington, 1950). This experiment is mainly a study of populations, but it has been necessary simultaneously to investigate the general biology of the perch, particularly the growth and related aspects. The computation of a formula to express the length,weight relationship and provide a means of interconverting measurements of length and weight, revealed the relative complexity of the interrelationships of length, weight and condition. Condition in turn was found to be correlated with the seasonal changes in gonad development and growth, and the importance of the effect of stomach contents on weight had also to be assessed. It was decided, therefore, to combine these separate but interrelated aspects in one paper. The main part of the paper is devoted to the questions of length-weight relationship and condition. A brief review of the fundamental bases for the concepts of length-weight relationship and condition and of some of the methods of analysis of length-weight data precedes an account of the application of the chosen methods to the present material and its results. This is followed by an account of seasonal changes in gonad weights. A brief account is then given of the rather scanty data available on the weight of stomach contents. The seasonal changes in condition are then described and, finally, some of the results are summarized, combined and discussed as a picture of the seasonal cycle in the Windermere perch. In the statistical analysis of the length-weight relationship the data for only one group of fish are given in full (Tables i and 2) as an example of the method of computation used for all the groups. Again, in the section on seasonal changes in gonad weight and condition Figs. 2-7 are based partly on tables of data which are not published. The full tables have been deposited with the Freshwater Biological Association, from whom copies can be obtained.
3,332 citations
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TL;DR: The lability of sex-determination systems in fish makes some species sensitive to environmental pollutants capable of mimicking or disrupting sex hormone actions, and such observations provide important insight into potential impacts from endocrine disruptors, and can provide useful monitoring tools for impacts on aquatic environments.
2,283 citations
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TL;DR: The data suggest that the gonads of juveniles from Lake Apopka have been permanently modified in ovo, so that normal steroidogenesis is not possible, and thus normal sexual maturation is unlikely, and the hypothesis that an estrogenic contaminant has caused the current failure in recruitment of alligators on LakeApopka is examined.
Abstract: The reproductive development of alligators from a contaminated and a control lake in central Florida was examined. Lake Apopka is adjacent to an EPA Superfund site, listed due to an extensive spill...
1,184 citations
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TL;DR: Variation in the hermaphrodite lineage suggests that cell-cell interaction may play a more significant role in organisms that develop by invariant lineages than has hitherto been considered.
882 citations
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Abstract: An important component of many studies of fish reproductive biology is the assessment of the stage of gonad development of individual fish. The methods in use vary from highly detailed to cursory, but there are few reviews of their reliability or usefulness. This review examines histology, measurements of oocyte size, staging based on the appearance of whole oocytes, staging based on the external appearance of the ovary, and gonad indices. Histology is the most accurate technique, but it is time- consuming and expensive. Staging based on the appearance of whole oocytes can be a useful alternative but may be inaccurate with oocytes in transitional stages of development. Staging based on the external appearance of the ovary is the simplest and most rapid method, but it may be subjective and its accuracy is uncertain. Oocyte size may be used as a predictor of developmental stage if the size ranges of the various stages are known, but the sizes of different oocyte stages may overlap, which complicates this approach. Oocyte size may be used on its own to measure development but gives little information on the physiological status of the ovaries. Gonad indices (gonad size relative to body size) provide a useful insight into changes in ovary size and complement results obtained using staging methods. However, gonad indices, like oocyte size, may be biased when samples of fish of different body sizes are compared.
793 citations