Bercovitch Fred B
Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center, University of Wisconsin, 1223 Capitol Court, Madison, WI, 53715.
Evolution. 1989 Nov;43(7):1507-1521. doi: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1989.tb02600.x.
One component of sexual selection is sperm competition. It has been reasoned that the intensity of sperm competition may be reflected in the relative testicular sizes of animals. Among males residing in multimale breeding systems, testicular size is relatively larger than among males residing in unimale mating systems. Information on whether differences in testicular size within a species can account for differences in male reproductive success is unavailable for natural populations of primates. A population of six troops of savanna baboons in Kenya was surveyed for morphometric analysis, and one of these troops was the subject of extensive behavioral observations afterwards. Testicular weights could not be obtained, but measurements of linear dimensions were transformed into volumetric estimates. Male weight accounted for 30% of the variance in testicular volume. Neither body size nor testicular volume was associated with differences in male reproductive activity. The outcome of fights over access to females could not be related to male body size, and ejaculatory patterns of males were independent of testicle size. Both sperm competition and aggressive competition intensified during the four-day optimum conception period, but fights over access to consort females were infrequent. Among savanna baboons, the probability of an ejaculation resulting in a conception is fairly low, which may account for the infrequency of injurious fights. Although testicle size influences sperm production, it does not influence either the timing of mating or the fertilizing capacity of spermatozoa, and both of these factors probably account for a substantial fraction of the variance in male baboon paternity. Sperm competition is an adjunct to agonistic competition as a mechanism affecting male baboon reproductive success. It is concluded that male reproductive success in baboons is affected more by social factors than by morphological traits associated with size.
性选择的一个组成部分是精子竞争。据推测,精子竞争的强度可能反映在动物相对的睾丸大小上。在多雄性繁殖系统中的雄性,其睾丸大小相对大于单雄性交配系统中的雄性。对于灵长类动物的自然种群,关于一个物种内睾丸大小的差异是否能解释雄性繁殖成功率的差异尚无相关信息。对肯尼亚六群草原狒狒进行了形态测量分析调查,之后其中一群成为广泛行为观察的对象。无法获取睾丸重量,但线性尺寸测量被转化为体积估计值。雄性体重占睾丸体积变异的30%。体型和睾丸体积均与雄性繁殖活动的差异无关。争夺与雌性交配机会的争斗结果与雄性体型无关,雄性的射精模式也与睾丸大小无关。在为期四天的最佳受孕期内,精子竞争和攻击性竞争都加剧了,但争夺与有配偶雌性交配机会的争斗并不频繁。在草原狒狒中,射精导致受孕的概率相当低,这可能解释了伤害性争斗不频繁的原因。尽管睾丸大小影响精子产生,但它既不影响交配时间也不影响精子的受精能力,这两个因素可能在很大程度上解释了雄性狒狒父权的变异。精子竞争是影响雄性狒狒繁殖成功的一种机制,是对抗性竞争的辅助手段。研究得出结论,狒狒中雄性的繁殖成功更多地受社会因素影响,而非与体型相关的形态特征。