Sakaluk Scott K, Schaus Jennifer M, Eggert Anne-Katrin, Snedden W Andrew, Brady Pamela L
Department of Biological Sciences, Illinois State University, Normal 61790-4120, USA.
Evolution. 2002 Oct;56(10):1999-2007. doi: 10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb00126.x.
Females, by mating with more than one male in their lifetime, may reduce their risk of receiving sperm from genetically incompatible sires or increase their prospects of obtaining sperm from genetically superior sires. Although there is evidence of both kinds of genetic benefits in crickets, their relative importance remains unclear, and the extent to which experimentally manipulated levels of polyandry in the laboratory correspond to those that occur in nature remain unknown. We measured lifetime polyandry of free-living female decorated crickets, Gryllodes sigillatus, and conducted an experiment to determine whether polyandry leads to an increase in offspring viability. We experimentally manipulated both the levels of polyandry and opportunities for females to select among males, randomly allocating the offspring of experimental females to high-food-stress or low-food-stress regimes to complete their development. Females exhibited a high degree of polyandry, mating on average with more than seven different males during their lifetime and up to as many as 15. Polyandry had no effect on either the developmental time or survival of offspring. However, polyandrous females produced significantly heavier sons than those of monandrous females, although there was no difference in the adult mass of daughters. There was no significant interaction between mating treatment and offspring nutritional regimen in their effects on offspring mass, suggesting that benefits accruing to female polyandry are independent of the environment in which offspring develop. The sex difference in the extent to which male and female offspring benefit via their mother's polyandry may reflect possible differences in the fitness returns from sons and daughters. The larger mass gain shown by sons of polyandrous females probably leads to their increased reproductive success, either because of their increased success in sperm competition or because of their increased life span.
雌性蟋蟀一生中与多个雄性交配,可能会降低从基因不兼容的雄性那里获得精子的风险,或者增加从基因优良的雄性那里获得精子的可能性。虽然有证据表明蟋蟀存在这两种遗传益处,但它们的相对重要性仍不清楚,而且实验室中通过实验操控的多配偶水平与自然发生的水平之间的对应程度也尚不清楚。我们测量了自由生活的雌性饰纹蟋蟀(Gryllodes sigillatus)一生的多配偶情况,并进行了一项实验,以确定多配偶是否会提高后代的生存能力。我们通过实验操控了多配偶水平以及雌性在雄性之间进行选择的机会,将实验雌性的后代随机分配到高食物压力或低食物压力环境中完成发育。雌性表现出高度的多配偶行为,一生中平均与七个以上不同的雄性交配,最多可达15个。多配偶对后代的发育时间或存活率均无影响。然而,多配偶雌性所产的儿子比单配偶雌性所产的儿子明显更重,不过女儿的成虫体重没有差异。交配处理和后代营养方案对后代体重的影响之间没有显著的交互作用,这表明雌性多配偶所带来的益处与后代发育的环境无关。雄性和雌性后代通过母亲的多配偶行为所获得益处的程度存在性别差异,这可能反映了儿子和女儿在适合度回报方面可能存在的差异。多配偶雌性所产儿子体重增加幅度更大,这可能会提高它们的繁殖成功率,要么是因为它们在精子竞争中更成功,要么是因为它们的寿命更长。