In Interesting Engineering, Trevor English surveys the common phenomenon of animals changing sex, and its physiological and genetic basis. For student-facing use, we recommend prefacing this article with a language distinction: Animals “change sex” meaning there is a change in their production of sex hormones and a physical change in their reproductive organs. Humans instead undergo “gender transition”, with “sex change” being an outdated term for this process.
The Unbelievable Secrets of Sex-Changing Animals
Diverse Reproductive Strategies Gallery Walk
In this lesson, students do a reading about R- and K-selection and then a gallery walk of four more unique reproductive strategies in animals. Students use the notes taken during the gallery walk to write a paragraph response comparing two different strategies.
The examples chosen include sequential hermaphroditism in clownfish and unisexual populations of all-female salamanders. However, they are limited in that all the example species are described to have binary sex. This lesson could be supplemented with examples of species where there are more than two sexes - see Scientific Evidence for examples.
Editor’s note: The term "hermaphrodite" is appropriate for referring to non-human animals with sex characteristics that do not fit typical binary notions of male or female bodies. For humans, “intersex” is the appropriate term—learn more here!
For a longer and more inquiry-based lesson, the gallery walk information could be shortened to remove the explanation for why each species has a unique reproductive strategy. Students could be tasked with hypothesizing the relationship between reproductive strategy and social structure or environment of the animal.
The sex-changing Australian goby species have 2 sexes: all-female or part-male-part-female. (Gender Showcase, 9-12)
Image credit: Yellowfin Goby, Acanthogobius flavimanus, in Jawbone Marine Sanctuary, Williamstown, Port Phillip, Victoria, February 2018. Source: Wayne Martin / iNaturalist.org. License: CC By Attribution-NonCommercial.
Edit (6/23/21): The book excerpt uses “gender” when it talks about morphology (body plan) in the Barlow study. Thanks to reader Breanna H. for asking about a previous draft of this post that repeated the book’s wording. I learned recently how much K-6 material leans on gender norms to explain biological things. Models are always imperfect, and Breanna refers to a teaching approach that avoids applying the human concept of gender to animals, and a discussion about the risks in conflating sex and gender in animal model studies. (-RXS)
Edit (6/8/23): Thanks to Wayne, adding this: Editor’s note: The term "hermaphrodite" is appropriate for referring to non-human animals with sex characteristics that do not fit typical binary notions of male or female bodies. For humans, “intersex” is the appropriate term—learn more here!(-RXS)
A species of goby from Lizard Island on Australia’s Great Barrier Reef [is the Australian goby].(EN12) In the Australian goby, all the juveniles mature into females, with some later becoming males. The males, however, can change back into females. In fact, the meaning of male is ambiguous here. The investigators defined a male to be any fish with at least some sperm production. All males, however, contain early-stage oocytes—cells that develop into eggs—in their gonads. So all the males remain part female. The species therefore consists of two genders at any one time: all-female fish and part-male-part-female fish.
(EN12 G. Barlow (2000) The Cichlid Fishes: Nature’s Grand Experiment in Evolution. Perseus.)
Citation: Roughgarden, J. (2013) Evolution’s Rainbow: Diversity, Gender, and Sexuality in Nature and People. University of California Press, Berkeley. pp. 137-38.