Lane Sarah M, Solino Joanna H, Mitchell Christopher, Blount Jonathan D, Okada Kensuke, Hunt John, House Clarissa M
Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life & Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus , Cornwall TR10 9EZ , UK .
Centre for Ecology and Conservation, College of Life & Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Penryn Campus , Cornwall TR10 9EZ , UK , ; Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Vector Control Department , Pembroke Place, Liverpool L3 5QA , UK .
Behav Ecol. 2015 Jul-Aug;26(4):1021-1029. doi: 10.1093/beheco/arv047. Epub 2015 Apr 29.
Males can gather information on the risk and intensity of sperm competition from their social environment. Recent studies have implicated chemosensory cues, for instance cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) in insects, as a key source of this information. Here, using the broad-horned flour beetle (), we investigated the importance of contact-derived rival male CHCs in informing male perception of sperm competition risk and intensity. We experimentally perfumed virgin females with male CHCs via direct intersexual contact and measured male pre- and post-copulatory investment in response to this manipulation. Using chemical analysis, we verified that this treatment engendered changes to perfumed female CHC profiles, but did not make perfumed females "smell" mated. Despite this, males responded to these chemical changes. Males increased courtship effort under low levels of perceived competition (from 1-3 rivals), but significantly decreased courtship effort as perceived competition rose (from 3-5 rivals). Furthermore, our measurement of ejaculate investment showed that males allocated significantly more sperm to perfumed females than to control females. Together, these results suggest that changes in female chemical profile elicited by contact with rival males do not provide males with information on female mating status, but rather inform males of the presence of rivals within the population and thus provide a means for males to indirectly assess the risk of sperm competition.
雄性可以从其社会环境中收集有关精子竞争风险和强度的信息。最近的研究表明,化学感应线索,例如昆虫中的表皮碳氢化合物(CHCs),是这类信息的关键来源。在此,我们以广角粉甲虫为研究对象,调查了接触来源的雄性竞争对手CHCs在告知雄性精子竞争风险和强度认知方面的重要性。我们通过直接的两性接触,用雄性CHCs对未交配的雌性进行实验性加香处理,并测量雄性在交配前和交配后的投入,以回应这种处理。通过化学分析,我们证实这种处理改变了加香雌性的CHC谱,但并未使加香雌性“闻起来”已交配。尽管如此,雄性对这些化学变化做出了反应。在感知到的竞争水平较低时(1 - 3个竞争对手),雄性增加了求偶努力,但随着感知到的竞争加剧(3 - 5个竞争对手),求偶努力显著减少。此外,我们对射精投入的测量表明,雄性分配给加香雌性的精子比分配给对照雌性的精子显著更多。总之,这些结果表明,与雄性竞争对手接触引起的雌性化学特征变化,并未向雄性提供有关雌性交配状态的信息,而是向雄性告知了种群中竞争对手的存在,从而为雄性提供了一种间接评估精子竞争风险的方式。