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Invertebrate Mating Systems 3 Sperm Competition

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Title: Invertebrate Mating Systems 3 Sperm Competition


1
Invertebrate Mating Systems (3)Sperm Competition
Cryptic Female Choice inInsects
2
Sexual Selection
  • What traits can be influenced by sexual
    selection?
  • Morphological structures
  • Behaviours
  • Signals Visual, Acoustic and Chemical

3
Sexual Selection
  • Intra-sexual selection
  • Male/Male Competition
  • Female/Female Competition
  • Inter-sexual Selection
  • Female Mate Choice
  • Male Mate Choice

4
Sexual selection does not end with mating!
  • Why?
  • Females often mate with more than one male
  • Females can store sperm
  • One clutch of offspring often has mixed
    paternity

5
Sexual selection does not end with mating!
  • Males continue to compete for fertilization
  • Sperm Competition
  • Females continue to choose highest quality males
    to fertilize their eggs
  • Cryptic Female Choice

6
Is sperm competition important?
  • Males that are superior competitors before mating
    may not end up fathering all of the offspring of
    a particular female
  • Sperm also have
  • to be good competitors

7
Sperm storage
  • Ejaculates can compete for longer than males
  • Females in many animal groups can store sperm for
    long periods of time (gt30 years in some ants)
  • Special storage organs called spermathecae

Different types of spermathecae in insects
8
Important terms
  • Sperm CompetitionCompetition between the sperm
    from two or more males for the fertilization of a
    given set of ova (Parker, 1998)
  • Sperm precedence The non-random utilization of
    sperm from a particular male, when the sperm from
    two or more males mix within a female
  • Sperm displacement The displacement of one
    males sperm from the genital opening of a female
    by a different male
  • P2 The proportion of offspring sired by the last
    male to mate last-male paternity

9
Evidence for sperm competition
  • Morphological adaptations (Genitalia)
  • Chemical adaptations
  • Accessory Gland Products
  • Mating Plugs
  • Behavioural adaptations
  • Mate Guarding Copulatory Courtship
  • Differences in copula duration
  • Sperm morphology

10
Morphological adaptationsSexual selection the
evolution of animal genitalia
  • Male genitalia that can position sperm in the
    most advantageous place will be selected for
  • Male genitalia that can remove or reposition the
    sperm of previous males will be selected for
  • Male genitalia with a titillatory function will
    be selected for

11
Morphological adaptationsSexual selection the
evolution of animal genitalia
  • Sperm removal in dragonflies and damselflies
    (Order Odonata)

12
Male genitaliain dragonfliesSperm removal and
repositioning
Orthetrum cancellatum
Crocothemis erythraea
Simmons, L.W. (2001). Sperm Competition and its
Evolutionary Consequences in the Insects.
Princeton University Press.
13
Chemical/Physiological AdaptationsAccessory
Gland Products
  • AGPs are chemicals produced in the accessory
    glands of the male reproductive system to be
    deposited with sperm
  • AGPs often have an effect on female physiology or
    behaviour
  • E.g. Acheta domestica
  • Male AGPs stimulate
  • oviposition in females.

14
Chemical/Physiological AdaptationsMating Plugs
  • Chemicals produced by a male that solidify to
    block the genital opening of a female, preventing
    other males from copulating or depositing sperm
    e.g. Butterflies and moths

Graphium sarpedon
Atrophaneura alcinous
Euryades corethrus
15
Chemical/Physiological AdaptationsMating Plugs
  • Mating plugs are chemicals that are produced by a
    male that solidify to block the genital opening
    of a female, preventing other males from
    copulating or depositing sperm e.g. Lepidoptera

0.75
0.48
P2
Mating Plugs
With Without
16
Behavioural AdaptationsMate Guarding
  • Males often associate with female mates after
    mating has occurred and rigorously defend the
    female from other males
  • In a large number of insect species, the last
    male to mate achieves a higher paternity (high
    P2), so mate-guarding would reduce sperm
    competition.
  • Social monogamy may be an extension of
    mate-guarding

17
Behavioural AdaptationsMate Guarding
  • E.g. Gerris lacustris (water strider)
  • Males grip on to females during copulation using
    special appendages
  • Males continue to ride around on females after
    mating has finished, preventing other males from
    attempting to mate

18
Behavioural AdaptationsMate Guarding
  • E.g. Gerris lacustris (water strider)

MG Duration (min)
FFF MFF MFM MMM
Sex Ratio Treatments
19
Optimal Copula Duration
  • Usually, copulation duration is positively
    correlated with sperm transferred
  • In Yellow Dung Flies (Scathophaga stercoraria),
    larger males copulate for longer, and displace
    more of the previous males sperm

20
Sperm Morphology
  • Drosophila exhibit extreme variation in sperm
    length

21
Sperm Morphology
  • Sperm Length negatively correlated to P2 in
    Drosophila

Average P2 of Species
Average Sperm Length of Species
22
Cryptic Female Choice
  • Postcopulatory inter-sexual selection emphasizing
    the importance of female control over paternity
  • Dispels the myth of the passive female
  • Many levels of female control
  • Females can discard sperm
  • Females can terminate copulation
  • Females can impede plugging/plug removal
  • Females can bias the use of stored sperm
  • Females can remove spermatophore before sperm
    transfer is complete

23
Cryptic Female Choiceand Copulatory Courtship
  • E.g. Red Flour Beetles
  • (Tribolium castaneum)

Fertilization success
Unmanipulated males
Rate of leg rubbing
24
Cryptic Female Choiceand Copulatory Courtship
  • E.g. Red Flour Beetles
  • (Tribolium castaneum)

Fertilization success
Unmanipulated males
Manipulated males
Rate of leg rubbing
25
References
  • Alcock, J. (1989). Animal Behavior an
    evolutionary approach (4th Edition). Sinauer
    Assoc. Inc. Sunderland. Chapters 12, 13, 14.
  • Choe, J. C. Crespi, B. J. (Eds). (1997) The
    evolution of mating systems in insects and
    arachnids. Cambridge New York Cambridge
    University Press.
  • Chapters 2, 6, 16, 19 (and all of the others
    are interesting too!)
  • Eberhard, W. G. (1996) Female control sexual
    selection by cryptic female choice. Princeton
    University Press. Princeton.
  • Emlen, S. T. L. W. Oring. (1977). Ecology,
    sexual selection and the evolution of mating
    systems. Science 197 215-223.
  • Edvardsson, M. G. Arnqvist (2000). Copulatory
    courtship and cryptic female choice in red flour
    beetles Tribolium castaneum. Proceedings of the
    Royal Society of London B 267 559-563.
  • Gwynne, D. T. (1984). Sexual selection and
    sexual differences in mormon crickets
    (Orthoptera Tettigoniidae, Anabrus simplex).
    Evolution 38(5) 1011-1022.
  • Norman, M. D., J. Finn and T. Tregenza (1999).
    Female impersonation as an alternative
    reproductive strategy in giant cuttlefish.
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 266
    1347-1349
  • Simmons, L.W. (2001). Sperm Competition and its
    Evolutionary Consequences in the Insects.
    Princeton University Press. Princeton.

26
References
  • Tomkins, J. L. G. S. Brown (2004). Population
    density drives the local evolution of a threshold
    dimorphism. Nature. 431 1099-1103.
  • Shuster S. M. M. J. Wade (1991). Equal mating
    success among male reproductive strategies in a
    marine isopod. Nature. 350 608-610.
  • Hanlon, R. T. et al. (2005). Transient sexual
    mimicry leads to fertilization. Nature. 433. 212.
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