Rojas Mora Alfonso, Meniri Magali, Ciprietti Sabrina, Helfenstein Fabrice
Laboratory of Evolutionary Ecophysiology, Institute of Biology, University of Neuchatel, Rue Emile-Argand 11, Neuchatel, Switzerland.
BMC Evol Biol. 2017 Mar 4;17(1):66. doi: 10.1186/s12862-017-0914-2.
Comparative studies suggest that sperm competition exerts stabilizing selection towards an optimal sperm design - e.g., the relative size and covariation of different sperm sections or a quantitative measure of sperm shape - that maximizes male fertility, which results in reduced levels of within-male variation in sperm morphology. Yet, these studies also reveal substantial amounts of unexplained within-ejaculate variance, and the factors presiding to the maintenance of such within-male variation in sperm design at the population level still remain to be identified. Sperm competition models predict that males should progressively invest more resources in their germline as their mating costs increase, i.e., the soma/germline allocation trade-off hypothesis. When access to fertile females is determined by social dominance, the soma/germline allocation trade-off hypothesis predicts that dominant males should invest less in the control of spermatogenesis. Hence, dominance should positively correlate with within-male variance in sperm design.
In support of this hypothesis, we found that dominant house sparrow males produce ejaculates with higher levels of within-ejaculate variation in sperm design compared to subordinate males. However, after experimentally manipulating male social status, this pattern was not maintained.
Our results suggest that males might control variation in sperm design according to their social status to some extent. Yet, it seems that such within-ejaculate variation in sperm design cannot be rapidly adjusted to a new status. While variation in sperm design could result from various non-exclusive sources, we discuss how strategic allocation of resources to the somatic vs. the germline functions could be an important process shaping the relationship between within-male variation in sperm design and social status.
比较研究表明,精子竞争对最佳精子设计施加稳定选择——例如,不同精子部分的相对大小和协变或精子形状的定量测量——这使雄性生育力最大化,从而导致雄性体内精子形态的变异水平降低。然而,这些研究也揭示了射精内存在大量无法解释的变异,并且在种群水平上维持雄性体内这种精子设计变异的因素仍有待确定。精子竞争模型预测,随着交配成本增加,雄性应逐渐在其生殖系中投入更多资源,即体细胞/生殖系分配权衡假说。当获得可育雌性交配的机会由社会优势地位决定时,体细胞/生殖系分配权衡假说预测,优势雄性在精子发生控制方面的投入应较少。因此,优势地位应与雄性体内精子设计的变异呈正相关。
为支持这一假说,我们发现,与从属雄性相比,优势雄性家麻雀产生的射精中精子设计的射精内变异水平更高。然而,在对雄性社会地位进行实验性操纵后,这种模式并未维持。
我们的结果表明,雄性可能在一定程度上根据其社会地位控制精子设计的变异。然而,似乎射精内精子设计的这种变异不能迅速调整到新的地位。虽然精子设计的变异可能源于各种非排他性来源,但我们讨论了资源在体细胞功能与生殖系功能之间的策略性分配如何可能是塑造雄性体内精子设计变异与社会地位之间关系的一个重要过程。