Simmons L W, Kotiaho J S
Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Animal Biology (M092), The University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA, Australia.
J Evol Biol. 2007 Mar;20(2):488-95. doi: 10.1111/j.1420-9101.2006.01274.x.
Life history theory provides a powerful tool to study an organism's biology within an evolutionary framework. The notion that males face a longevity cost of competing for and displaying to females lies at the core of sexual selection theory. Likewise, recent game theory models of the evolution of ejaculation strategies assume that males face a trade-off between expenditure on the ejaculate and expenditure on gaining additional matings. Males of the dung beetle Onthophagus binodis adopt alternative reproductive tactics in which major males fight for and help provision females, and minor males sneak copulations with females that are guarded by major males. Minor males are always subject to sperm competition, and consistent with theoretical expectation, minor males have a greater expenditure on their ejaculate than major males. We used this model system to seek evidence that mating comes at a cost for future fertility and/or male expenditure on courtship and attractiveness, and to establish whether these traits vary between alternative mating tactics. We monitored the lifespan of males exposed to females and nonmating populations, and sampled males throughout their lives to assess their fertility and courtship behaviour. We found a significant longevity cost of reproduction, but no fertility cost. On average, males from mating populations had a lower courtship rate than those from nonmating populations. This small effect, although statistically nonsignificant, was associated with significant increases in the time males required to achieve mating. Minor males had lower courtship rates than major males, and took longer to achieve mating. Although we did not measure ejaculate expenditure in this study, the correlation between lower courtship rate and longer mating speed of minor males documented here with their greater expenditure on the ejaculate found in previous studies, is consistent with game theory models of ejaculate expenditure which assume that males trade expenditure on gaining matings for expenditure on gaining fertilizations.
生活史理论提供了一个强大的工具,用于在进化框架内研究生物体的生物学特性。雄性在争夺雌性和向雌性展示方面面临长寿成本这一观点,是性选择理论的核心。同样,最近关于射精策略进化的博弈论模型假设,雄性在射精支出和获取额外交配机会的支出之间面临权衡。双瘤嗡蜣螂的雄性采取不同的生殖策略,其中大雄螂争夺并帮助为雌螂提供食物,而小雄螂则与被大雄螂守护的雌螂偷偷交配。小雄螂总是面临精子竞争,与理论预期一致,小雄螂在射精上的支出比大雄螂更大。我们利用这个模型系统来寻找证据,证明交配会对未来的生育能力和/或雄性在求偶及吸引力方面的支出造成成本,并确定这些特征在不同的交配策略之间是否存在差异。我们监测了接触雌性的雄性和未交配群体的寿命,并在雄性的整个生命过程中进行采样,以评估它们的生育能力和求偶行为。我们发现繁殖存在显著的长寿成本,但没有生育成本。平均而言,来自交配群体的雄性求偶率低于未交配群体的雄性。这种微小的影响虽然在统计学上不显著,但与雄性实现交配所需时间的显著增加有关。小雄螂的求偶率低于大雄螂,且实现交配所需时间更长。虽然我们在本研究中没有测量射精支出,但此处记录的小雄螂较低的求偶率和较长的交配速度与它们在射精上的更大支出之间的相关性,与之前研究中发现的情况一致,这与射精支出的博弈论模型相符,该模型假设雄性在获取交配机会的支出和获取受精机会的支出之间进行权衡。