نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1998
J A Zeh S D Newcomer D W Zeh

In most animal species, particularly those in which females engage in polyandry, mate choice is a sequential process in which a female must choose to mate or not to mate with each male encountered. Although a number of theoretical and empirical investigations have examined the effects of sequential mate choice on the operation of sexual selection, how females respond to solicitation by previous...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2013
Renée C Firman Leigh W Simmons

Theory predicts that sperm competition will generate sexual conflict that favours increased ovum defences against polyspermy. A recent study on house mice has shown that ovum resistance to fertilization coevolves in response to increased sperm fertilizing capacity. However, the capacity for the female gamete to adjust its fertilizability as a strategic response to sperm competition risk has nev...

Journal: :Journal of comparative psychology 2011
William F McKibbin Valerie G Starratt Todd K Shackelford Aaron T Goetz

Female extrapair copulation (EPC) can be costly to a woman's long-term romantic partner. If a woman has copulated recently with a man other than her long-term partner, her reproductive tract may contain the sperm of both men, initiating sperm competition (whereby sperm from multiple males compete to fertilize an egg). Should the woman become pregnant, her long-term partner is at risk of cuckold...

2010
Jan T. Lifjeld Terje Laskemoen Oddmund Kleven Tomas Albrecht Raleigh J. Robertson

BACKGROUND The rate of extrapair paternity is a commonly used index for the risk of sperm competition in birds, but paternity data exist for only a few percent of the approximately 10400 extant species. As paternity analyses require extensive field sampling and costly lab work, species coverage in this field will probably not improve much in the foreseeable future. Recent findings from passerin...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2011
Jean-François Lemaître Steven A Ramm Jane L Hurst Paula Stockley

Theory predicts that males should increase overall investment in ejaculate expenditure with increasing levels of sperm competition. Since ejaculate production is costly, we may expect males to tailor their reproductive investment according to anticipated levels of sperm competition. Here, we investigate plasticity in ejaculate investment in response to cues of population average levels of sperm...

Journal: :Biology of reproduction 2007
J L Fitzpatrick J K Desjardins N Milligan R Montgomerie S Balshine

Theory predicts that males experiencing elevated levels of sperm competition will invest more in gonads and produce faster-swimming sperm. Although there is ample evidence in support of the first prediction, few studies have examined sperm swimming speed in relation to sperm competition. In this study, we tested these predictions from sperm competition theory by examining sperm characteristics ...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2008
Adrianne Prokupek Federico Hoffmann Seong-il Eyun Etsuko Moriyama Min Zhou Lawrence Harshman

This study investigates genes enriched for expression in the spermatheca, the long-term sperm storage organ (SSO) of female Drosophila. SSO genes are likely to play an important role in processes of sexual selection such as sperm competition and cryptic female choice. Although there is keen interest in the mechanisms of sexual selection at the molecular level, very little is known about the fem...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2013
Lisa Locatello Federica Poli Maria B Rasotto

Seminal fluid often makes up a large part of an ejaculate, yet most empirical and theoretical studies on sperm competition have focused on how sperm characteristics (number and quality) affect fertilization success. However, seminal fluid influences own sperm performance and may potentially influence the outcome of sperm competition, by also affecting that of rivals. As a consequence males may ...

2005
Todd K. Shackelford Nicholas Pound Aaron T. Goetz

Postcopulatory competition between males, in the form of sperm competition, is a widespread phenomenon in many animal species. The extent to which sperm competition has been an important selective pressure during human evolution remains controversial, however. The authors review critically the evidence that human males and females have psychological, behavioral, and physiological adaptations th...

Journal: :Biology letters 2010
Renée C Firman Leigh W Simmons

Evolutionary biologists have argued that there should be a positive relationship between sperm size and sperm velocity, and that these traits influence a male's sperm competitiveness. However, comparative analyses investigating the evolutionary associations between sperm competition risk and sperm morphology have reported inconsistent patterns of association, and in vitro sperm competition expe...

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