نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2013
Kiyono Sekii Dita B Vizoso Georg Kuales Katrien De Mulder Peter Ladurner Lukas Schärer

Sperm production is a key male reproductive trait and an important parameter in sperm competition theory. Under sperm competition, paternity success is predicted to depend strongly on male allocation to sperm production. Furthermore, because sperm production is inherently costly, individuals should economize in sperm expenditure, and conditional adjustment of the copulation frequency according ...

Journal: :Journal of comparative psychology 2006
Todd K Shackelford Aaron T Goetz

A comparative evolutionary psychological perspective predicts that species that recurrently faced similar adaptive problems may have evolved similar psychological mechanisms to solve these problems. Sperm competition provides an arena in which to assess the heuristic value of such a comparative evolutionary perspective. The sperm competition that results from female infidelity and polyandry pre...

Journal: :Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 1999

Journal: :Genetics and molecular research : GMR 2002
Shree Ram Singh Bashisth N Singh Hugo F Hoenigsberg

Female remating is fundamental to evolutionary biology as it determines the pattern of sexual selection and sexual conflict. Remating in females is an important component of Drosophila mating systems because it affects sperm usage patterns and sexual selection. Remating is common in females of many species of Drosophila in both natural and laboratory populations. It has been reported in many in...

Journal: :Current Biology 2015
Kang-Min Lee Ivana Daubnerová R. Elwyn Isaac Chen Zhang Sekyu Choi Jongkyeong Chung Young-Joon Kim

In polyandrous females, sperm storage permits competition between sperm of different mates, and in some species females influence the relative fertilization success of competing sperm in favor of a preferred mate [1, 2]. In female Drosophila melanogaster, sperm competition is strongly influenced by the timing of sperm ejection from the uterus [3, 4]. Understanding how female behavior influences...

Journal: :Journal of insect physiology 2000
Hosken Ward

While sperm competition has been extensively studied, the mechanisms involved are typically not well understood. Nevertheless, awareness of sperm competition mechanisms is currently recognised as being of fundamental importance for an understanding of many behavioural strategies. In the yellow dung fly, a model system for studies of sperm competition, second male sperm precedence appears to res...

2001
Mindy Nelson Robert Kelley D. B. THOMPSON

We investigated how sperm morphology varies across 16 species of shorebirds in the Scolopacidae, Charadriidae, and Jacanidae. Sperm were significantly longer in nonmonogamous than in socially monogamous species. Nonmonogamous species also I Received 27 January 1999. Accepted 22 June 1999. 2Current address: Department of Zoology, Private Bag 4800, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zeal...

2016
P. Giraldo‐Perez P. Herrera A. Campbell M. L. Taylor A. Skeats R. Aggio N. Wedell T. A. R. Price

Sperm commonly compete within females to fertilize ova, but research has focused on short-term sperm storage: sperm that are maintained in a female for only a few days or weeks before use. In nature, females of many species store sperm for months or years, often during periods of environmental stress, such as cold winters. Here we examine the outcome of sperm competition in the fruit fly Drosop...

2016
Anna L. Campbell Don R. Levitan David J. Hosken Ceri Lewis

Sperm competition is extremely common in many ecologically important marine taxa. Ocean acidification (OA) is driving rapid changes to the marine environments in which freely spawned sperm operate, yet the consequences of OA on sperm performance are poorly understood in the context of sperm competition. Here, we investigated the impacts of OA (+1000 μatm pCO2) on sperm competitiveness for the s...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2007
P Carazo E Font B Alfthan

Males of many species adjust their reproductive behaviour according to the perceived risk of sperm competition. Although this phenomenon is widespread in insects and other animals, the mechanisms that allow mates to assess sperm competition levels remain largely unexplored. In this study, we analysed the mating behaviour of pairs of Tenebrio molitor beetles under three odour treatments represen...

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