Tennessen J A, Zamudio K R
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, E145 Corson Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-2701, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2003 Jun;12(6):1567-76. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-294x.2003.01830.x.
We tested whether the order in which males encounter females affects reproductive fitness in spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum). Using mating chambers in the field, we allowed one male access to a female before a second male. We then used four microsatellite markers in paternity analyses of the resulting larvae. First males sired a significantly larger number of offspring than second males, suggesting that male reproductive success is greatly enhanced by early arrival at breeding ponds. Multiple paternity was common among clutches, and frequently larvae were assigned to unidentified males that had not been in the chambers. Sperm from these males had either been stored by females for a year or obtained more recently at other breeding sites.
我们测试了雄性斑点钝口螈(Ambystoma maculatum)与雌性相遇的顺序是否会影响其繁殖适应性。在野外使用交配室,我们让一只雄性在另一只雄性之前接触一只雌性。然后,我们在对所产生幼虫的亲子鉴定分析中使用了四个微卫星标记。先到达的雄性比后到达的雄性产生的后代数量显著更多,这表明提前到达繁殖池塘能大大提高雄性的繁殖成功率。一窝卵中多个父本的情况很常见,而且通常会有幼虫被认定为父本不明,这些父本并非来自实验交配室中的雄性。这些雄性的精子要么是雌性储存了一年的,要么是雌性最近在其他繁殖地点获得的。