School of Agriculture and Environment, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand.
Guangxi Key Laboratory of Agric-Environment and Agric-Products Safety, National Demonstration Center for Experimental Plant Science Education, College of Agriculture, Guangxi University, Nanning, China.
Insect Sci. 2023 Feb;30(1):232-240. doi: 10.1111/1744-7917.13088. Epub 2022 Jun 22.
Male animals often adjust their sperm investment in response to sperm competition environment. To date, only a few studies have investigated how juvenile sociosexual settings affect sperm production before adulthood and sperm allocation during the first mating. Yet, it is unclear whether juvenile sociosexual experience (1) determines lifetime sperm production and allocation in any animal species; (2) alters the eupyrene : apyrene sperm ratio in lifetime ejaculates of any lepidopteran insects, and (3) influences lifetime ejaculation patterns, number of matings and adult longevity. Here we used a polygamous moth, Ephestia kuehniella, to address these questions. Upon male adult emergence from juveniles reared at different density and sex ratio, we paired each male with a virgin female daily until his death. We dissected each mated female to count the sperm transferred and recorded male longevity and lifetime number of matings. We demonstrate for the first time that males ejaculated significantly more eupyrenes and apyrenes in their lifetime after their young were exposed to juvenile rivals. Adult moths continued to produce eupyrene sperm, contradicting the previous predictions for lepidopterans. The eupyrene : apyrene ratio in the lifetime ejaculates remained unchanged in all treatments, suggesting that the sperm ratio is critical for reproductive success. Male juvenile exposure to other juveniles regardless of sex ratio caused significantly shorter adult longevity and faster decline in sperm ejaculation over successive matings. However, males from all treatments achieved similar number of matings in their lifetime. This study provides insight into adaptive resource allocation by males in response to juvenile sociosexual environment.
雄性动物通常会根据精子竞争环境来调整精子投资。迄今为止,只有少数研究调查了青少年社交环境如何影响成年前的精子产生和第一次交配期间的精子分配。然而,尚不清楚青少年社交经验是否会:(1)决定任何动物物种的终生精子产生和分配;(2)改变任何鳞翅目昆虫终生精液中的有精囊精子与无精囊精子的比例;(3)影响终生射精模式、交配次数和成虫寿命。在这里,我们使用了一种多配偶的飞蛾,Ephestia kuehniella,来解决这些问题。当雄性成虫从在不同密度和性别比例下饲养的幼虫中出现时,我们每天将每只雄性与一只处女雌性配对,直到他死亡。我们解剖每只交配过的雌性,以计算转移的精子数量,并记录雄性的寿命和终生交配次数。我们首次证明,雄性在年轻时暴露于竞争的幼虫后,在其一生中会射出更多的有精囊精子和无精囊精子。成年飞蛾继续产生有精囊精子,这与之前对鳞翅目昆虫的预测相矛盾。所有处理组的终生精液中的有精囊精子与无精囊精子的比例保持不变,这表明精子比例对生殖成功至关重要。无论性别比例如何,雄性幼虫暴露于其他幼虫中都会导致成虫寿命明显缩短,并且在连续交配中精子射精速度加快。然而,所有处理组的雄性在其一生中都达到了相似的交配次数。这项研究为雄性动物根据青少年社交环境做出适应性资源分配提供了深入的了解。