نتایج جستجو برای: sperm competition

تعداد نتایج: 121391  

Journal: :Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology 2014

2009
Michelle J. Solensky Karen S. Oberhauser

We characterized sperm precedence in monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus), using a series of experiments in which we manipulated male mating histories to vary spermatophore size and the number of sperm transferred. Several factors affected the outcome of sperm competition. There was a pattern of second-male sperm precedence, but second-male precedence was rarely complete, and several other fa...

Journal: :Science 2010
Susanne P A den Boer Boris Baer Jacobus J Boomsma

Queens of ants and bees normally obtain a lifetime supply of sperm on a single day of sexual activity, and sperm competition is expected to occur in lineages where queens receive sperm from multiple males. We compared singly mated (monandrous) and multiply mated (polyandrous) sister groups of ants and bees and show that seminal fluid of polyandrous species has a more positive effect on the surv...

Journal: :Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences 1998

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2014
Geoff A Parker Jussi Lehtonen

Both gamete competition and gamete limitation can generate anisogamy from ancestral isogamy, and both sperm competition (SC) and sperm limitation (SL) can increase sperm numbers. Here, we compare the marginal benefits due to these two components at any given population level of sperm production using the risk and intensity models in sperm economics. We show quite generally for the intensity mod...

2014
Alberto Civetta Scott Finn

When females mate to multiple males, the last male to mate fathers the majority of progeny. When males of different species inseminate a female, the sperm of the male conspecific to the female is favored in fertilization in a process known as conspecific sperm precedence (CSP). A large number of studies in Drosophila have assayed the genetic basis of sperm competition, with a main focus on D. m...

Journal: :Genetics 2010
Clement Y Chow Mariana F Wolfner Andrew G Clark

In Drosophila, where females mate multiply, sperm competition contributes strongly to fitness variability among males. Males transfer "Acp" seminal proteins to females during mating, and these proteins influence the outcome of sperm competition. Because Acps function within the female, male proteins can directly interact with female molecules in a manner that affects reproductive fitness. Here ...

Journal: :Biology letters 2010
John L Fitzpatrick Francisco Garcia-Gonzalez Jonathan P Evans

Selection imposed through sperm competition is commonly thought to promote the evolution of longer sperm, since sperm length is assumed to be positively associated with sperm swimming velocity. Yet, the basis for this assumption remains controversial, and there is surprisingly little intraspecific evidence demonstrating such a link between sperm form and function. Here, we show that sperm lengt...

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