نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

Journal: :Biology letters 2013
Joshua P Moatt Calvin Dytham Michael D F Thom

Sperm competition between the ejaculates of multiple males for the fertilization of a given set of ova is taxonomically widespread. Males have evolved remarkable adaptations to increase their reproductive success under postcopulatory sexual selection, which in many species includes the ability to modify behaviour and ejaculate characteristics plastically to match the perceived level of sperm co...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
Tommaso Pizzari

W hen females are sexually promiscuous, the ejaculates of different males may compete for the fertilization of a set of ova, a process known as sperm competition. In internally fertilizing species, potential for sperm competition occurs whenever the ejaculates of different males cooccur in the female reproductive tract at the time of ovulation. Sperm competition is now recognized as a powerful ...

Journal: :Evolution; international journal of organic evolution 2009
Stefan Lüpold George M Linz James W Rivers David F Westneat Tim R Birkhead

Sperm morphology varies considerably across taxa, and postcopulatory sexual selection is thought to be one of the main forces responsible for this diversity. Several studies have investigated the effects of the variation in sperm design on sperm function, but the consequences of variation in sperm design on testis morphology have been overlooked. Testes size or architecture may determine the si...

Journal: :The Biological bulletin 2000
C C Lambert

Ascidians (invertebrate chordates) are very abundant in many marine subtidal areas. They often live in dense multispecies clumps; thus, interspecific competition for space may be intense. Although most noncolonial species are broadcast spawners, their eggs can be fertilized only by sperm of the same species (1). Multiple fertilization is lethal and all animals have evolved blocks to polyspermy....

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2006
Fleur E Champion de Crespigny Nina Wedell

The maternally inherited bacterium Wolbachia pipientis imposes significant fitness costs on its hosts. One such cost is decreased sperm production resulting in reduced fertility of male Drosophila simulans infected with cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) inducing Wolbachia. We tested the hypothesis that Wolbachia infection affects sperm competitive ability and found that Wolbachia infection is in...

2006
A. T. Goetz T. K. Shackelford

Sexual selection is the mechanism that favors an increase in the frequency of alleles associated with reproduction (Darwin, 1871). Darwin distinguished sexual selection from natural selection, but today most evolutionary scientists combine the two concepts under the name, natural selection. Sexual selection is composed of intrasexual competition (competition between members of the same sex for ...

2014
Snigdha Misra Ajay Kumar Ch. Ratnasekhar Vandana Sharma Mohana Krishna Reddy Mudiam Kristipati Ravi Ram

Dwindling male fertility due to xenobiotics is of global concern. Accordingly, male reproductive toxicity assessment of xenobiotics through semen quality analysis in exposed males, and examining progeny production of their mates is critical. These assays, in part, are biased towards monogamy. Females soliciting multiple male partners (polyandry) is the norm in many species. Polyandry incites sp...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2014
Susanne Zajitschek Cosima Hotzy Felix Zajitschek Simone Immler

The inheritance of non-genetic factors is increasingly seen to play a major role in ecology and evolution. While the causes and consequences of epigenetic effects transmitted from the mother to the offspring have received ample attention, much less is known about how variation in the condition of the father affects the offspring. Here, we manipulated the intensity of sperm competition experienc...

Journal: :Molecular human reproduction 2014
E T Kosman D R Levitan

Proteins expressed on the surface of sperm and egg mediate gametic compatibility and these proteins can be subject to intense positive selection. In this review, we discuss what is known about the patterns of adaptive evolution of gamete recognition proteins (GRPs). We focus on species that broadcast eggs and sperm into the environment for external fertilization, as the ease of observing and ma...

2011
Maximiliano Tourmente Montserrat Gomendio Eduardo R. S. Roldan

Two complementary hypotheses have been proposed to explain variation in sperm size. The first proposes that post-copulatory sexual selection favors an increase in sperm size because it enhances sperm swimming speed, which is an important determinant of fertilization success in competitive contexts. The second hypothesis proposes that mass-specific metabolic rate acts as a constraint, because la...

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