نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

2014
Rebecca J. Sardell Emily H. DuVal

Sperm competition, whereby sperm from multiple males compete to fertilize an egg, selects for adaptations that increase fertilization success. Because fertilization success is related to sperm number, size, and quality, both interspecific and intraspecific variation in these traits are predicted to correlate with the level of sperm competition. Specifically, species and individuals that experie...

Journal: :Reproduction 2011
Stefan Lüpold Joachim Wistuba Oliver S Damm James W Rivers Tim R Birkhead

The outcome of sperm competition (i.e. competition for fertilization between ejaculates from different males) is primarily determined by the relative number and quality of rival sperm. Therefore, the testes are under strong selection to maximize both sperm number and quality, which are likely to result in trade-offs in the process of spermatogenesis (e.g. between the rate of spermatogenesis and...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
John L Fitzpatrick Robert Montgomerie Julie K Desjardins Kelly A Stiver Niclas Kolm Sigal Balshine

Sperm competition, the contest among ejaculates from rival males to fertilize ova of a female, is a common and powerful evolutionary force influencing ejaculate traits. During competitive interactions between ejaculates, longer and faster spermatozoa are expected to have an edge; however, to date, there has been mixed support for this key prediction from sperm competition theory. Here, we use t...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2006
Tristan A F Long Robert Montgomerie Adam K Chippindale

Six sister populations of Drosophila melanogaster kept under identical environmental conditions for greater than 600 generations were reciprocally crossed to investigate the incidence of population divergence in allopatry. Population crosses directly influenced fitness, mating frequency, and sperm competition patterns. Changes in both female remating rate and the outcome of male sperm competiti...

2011
Lena Lüke Alberto Vicens Francois Serra Juan Jose Luque-Larena Hernán Dopazo Eduardo R. S. Roldan Montserrat Gomendio

Sexual selection has been proposed as the driving force promoting the rapid evolutionary changes observed in some reproductive genes including protamines. We test this hypothesis in a group of rodents which show marked differences in the intensity of sexual selection. Levels of sperm competition were not associated with the evolutionary rates of protamine 1 but, contrary to expectations, were n...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2013
Suzanne H Alonzo Tommaso Pizzari

Female remating rate dictates the level of sperm competition in a population, and extensive research has focused on how sperm competition generates selection on male ejaculate allocation. Yet the way ejaculate allocation strategies in turn generate selection on female remating rates, which ultimately influence levels of sperm competition, has received much less consideration despite increasing ...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2008
Alberto Velando Julio Eiroa Jorge Domínguez

In many animals in which females store sperm, males may detect female mating status and, in order to outcompete rival sperm, increase ejaculate size when copulating with non-virgin females. Although most studies have been restricted to organisms with separate sexes, theoretical models suggest that sperm competition should also be an important selective agent shaping life-history traits in simul...

2017
C Fricke T Chapman

Sperm competition is pervasive and fundamental to determining a male's overall fitness. Sperm traits and seminal fluid proteins (Sfps) are key factors. However, studies of sperm competition may often exclude females that fail to remate during a defined period. Hence, the resulting data sets contain fewer data from the potentially fittest males that have most success in preventing female rematin...

Journal: :Evolutionary psychology : an international journal of evolutionary approaches to psychology and behavior 2013
Michael N Pham Todd K Shackelford Yael Sela Lisa Lm Welling

We secured data from 243 men in committed, sexual, heterosexual relationships to test the sperm retention hypothesis of oral sex. We predicted that, among men who perform cunnilingus on their partner, those at greater risk of sperm competition are more likely to perform cunnilingus until their partner achieves orgasm (Prediction 1), and that, among men who ejaculate during penile-vaginal interc...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2006
Ronald Chase Katrina C Blanchard

Many of the seemingly bizarre animal behaviours can be understood only by acknowledging the power of sex to shape evolution. A case in point is the so-called love-dart that some terrestrial molluscs shoot at their prospective sexual partners. Given that the likelihood of copulation is not different after solid hits than after complete misses, why do these suitors act so violently towards their ...

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