Submitted by insink2300 t3_11drr8s in askscience
I know most animals sex is determined at fertilization. I couldn’t find any studies as to how/why temperature determines sex. I’m genuinely curious if any other animal species outside of turtles and alligators do this, or if any other animals do this in any other way after fertilization.
fletch44 t1_jaaxck5 wrote
Temperature affects the rate of chemical reactions.
Complex biological pathways result in more or less of particular hormones being produced at different temperatures. This is useful in cold-blooded organisms, because if the chemistry of some biological function tends to shut down beyond a particular temperature threshold, the organism can incorporate other biological systems that kick in to replace it.
The advantage of having offspring's sex affected in such a way is open to discussion.