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在昆虫中,雄性亲权共享与雌性对婚飞礼物的竞争。

Paternity sharing in insects with female competition for nuptial gifts.

作者信息

Browne Jessica H, Gwynne Darryl T

机构信息

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Toronto Mississauga Mississauga Ontario Canada.

Department of Biology Mount Allison University Sackville New Brunswick Canada.

出版信息

Ecol Evol. 2022 Oct 30;12(11):e9463. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9463. eCollection 2022 Nov.

Abstract

Male parental investment is expected to be associated with high confidence of paternity. Studies of species with exclusive male parental care have provided support for this hypothesis because mating typically co-occurs with each oviposition, allowing control over paternity and the allocation of care. However, in systems where males invest by feeding mates (typically arthropods), mating (and thus the investment) is separated from egg-laying, resulting in less control over insemination, as male ejaculates compete with rival sperm stored by females, and a greater risk of investing in unrelated offspring (cuckoldry). As strong selection on males to increase paternity would compromise the fitness of all a female's other mates that make costly nutrient contributions, paternity sharing (males not excluded from siring offspring) is an expected outcome of sperm competition. Using wild-caught females in an orthopteran and a dipteran species, in which sexually selected, ornamented females compete for male nuptial food gifts needed for successful reproduction, we examined paternity patterns and compared them with findings in other insects. We used microsatellite analysis of offspring (lifetime reproduction in the orthopteran) and stored sperm from wild-caught females in both study species. As predicted, there was evidence of shared paternity as few males failed to sire offspring. Further support for paternity sharing is the lack of last-male sperm precedence in our study species. Although paternity was not equal among sires, our estimates of paternity bias were similar to other insects with valuable nuptial gifts and contrasted with the finding that males are frequently excluded from siring offspring in species where males supply little more than sperm. This suggests paternity bias may be reduced in nuptial-gift systems and may help facilitate the evolution of these paternal investments.

摘要

雄性亲代投资预计与对父权的高度自信相关。对具有独占性雄性亲代照料的物种的研究为这一假设提供了支持,因为交配通常与每次产卵同时发生,从而能够控制父权并分配照料行为。然而,在雄性通过给配偶提供食物(通常是节肢动物)进行投资的系统中,交配(进而投资行为)与产卵是分开的,导致对授精的控制较少,因为雄性射精要与雌性储存的竞争对手的精子竞争,而且投资于非亲生后代(戴绿帽)的风险更大。由于对雄性增加父权的强烈选择会损害所有为雌性提供昂贵营养贡献的其他配偶的适应性,父权共享(雄性不被排除在后代父权之外)是精子竞争的预期结果。我们使用直翅目和双翅目物种中野生捕获的雌性进行研究,在这些物种中,经过性选择的、有装饰的雌性会争夺成功繁殖所需的雄性婚飞食物礼物,我们研究了父权模式,并将其与其他昆虫的研究结果进行比较。我们对后代进行了微卫星分析(直翅目物种的终生繁殖情况),并对两个研究物种中野生捕获雌性储存的精子进行了分析。正如预测的那样,有证据表明存在父权共享,因为很少有雄性未能成为后代的父亲。对父权共享的进一步支持是我们研究的物种中不存在最后交配雄性精子优先的情况。虽然父权在父亲之间并不平等,但我们对父权偏差的估计与其他有珍贵婚飞礼物的昆虫相似,这与以下发现形成对比:在雄性仅提供精子的物种中,雄性经常被排除在后代父权之外。这表明在婚飞礼物系统中父权偏差可能会降低,并且可能有助于促进这些父代投资的进化。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/60f3/9618826/eb070f54e99c/ECE3-12-e9463-g005.jpg

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