نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2002
Rhonda R Snook Therese Ann Markow

Gamete production for both males and females can be energetically expensive such that selection should maximize fertilization opportunities while minimizing fertilization costs. In laboratory studies of Drosophila reproduction, however, the failure of eggs to yield adult progeny can be quite high, suggesting that female control over gamete utilization is surprisingly inefficient. We examined ga...

2015
Javier delBarco-Trillo Rafael Mateo Eduardo R. S. Roldan

Sperm competition is a prevalent phenomenon that drives the evolution of sperm function. High levels of sperm competition lead to increased metabolism to fuel higher sperm velocities. This enhanced metabolism can result in oxidative damage (including lipid peroxidation) and damage to the membrane. We hypothesized that in those species experiencing high levels of sperm competition there are chan...

Journal: :Current Biology 2004
Stuart Wigby Tracey Chapman

The existence and evolutionary significance of sexual selection through sperm competition was first realized by Geoff Parker in a prescient and influential review published in 1970. Parker recognized that competition between males for fertilizations will continue after mating, if the sperm of two or more males overlap near the site of fertilization in females. The process of sperm competition w...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2005
Paul D Williams Troy Day Erin Cameron

The prevailing viewpoint in the study of sperm competition is that male sperm-allocation strategies evolve in response to the degree of sperm competition an ejaculate can expect to experience within a given mating. If males cannot assess the degree of sperm competition their ejaculate will face and/or they are unable to facultatively adjust sperm investment in response to perceived levels of co...

Journal: :Biology letters 2007
Leigh W Simmons Amy Denholm Chantelle Jackson Esther Levy Ewa Madon

Sperm competition theory predicts that males should increase their expenditure on the ejaculate with increasing risk of sperm competition, but decrease their expenditure with increasing intensity. There is accumulating evidence for sperm competition theory, based on examinations of testes size and/or the numbers of sperm ejaculated. However, recent studies suggest that ejaculate quality can als...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2011
Simone Immler Scott Pitnick Geoff A Parker Kate L Durrant Stefan Lüpold Sara Calhim Tim R Birkhead

Spermatozoa are amongst the most variable cells, and three factors are thought to account for this variation in design: fertilization mode, phylogeny, and postcopulatory sexual selection. In addition, it has long been assumed that a tradeoff exists between sperm size and number, and although postcopulatory sexual selection affects both traits, empirical evidence for a tradeoff has so far been e...

Journal: :Current Biology 2004
Matthew J.G. Gage Christopher P. Macfarlane Sarah Yeates Richard G. Ward Jeremy B. Searle Geoffrey A. Parker

Sperm competition occurs when sperm from more than one male compete for fertilizations. This form of post-copulatory sexual selection is recognized as a significant and widespread force in the evolution of male reproductive biology and as a key determinant of differential male reproductive success. Despite its importance, however, detailed mechanisms of sperm competition at the gamete level rem...

Journal: :Human nature 2006
Aaron T Goetz Todd K Shackelford

Rape of women by men might be generated either by a specialized rape adaptation or as a by-product of other psychological adaptations. Although increasing number of sexual partners is a proposed benefit of rape according to the "rape as an adaptation" and the "rape as a by-product" hypotheses, neither hypothesis addresses directly why some men rape their long-term partners, to whom they already...

Journal: :Journal of evolutionary biology 2015
M Tourmente J Delbarco Trillo E R S Roldan

Post-copulatory sexual selection, in the form sperm competition, has influenced the evolution of several male reproductive traits. However, theory predicts that sperm competition would lead to trade-offs between numbers and size of spermatozoa because increased costs per cell would result in a reduction of sperm number if both traits share the same energetic budget. Theoretical models have prop...

2011
Melissah Rowe Stephen Pruett-Jones

When ejaculates from rival males compete for fertilization, there is strong selection for sperm traits that enhance fertilization success. Sperm quantity is one such trait, and numerous studies have demonstrated a positive association between sperm competition and both testes size and the number of sperm available for copulations. Sperm competition is also thought to favor increases in sperm qu...

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