Hooper R E, Siva-Jothy M T
Department Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, UK.
Mol Ecol. 1996 Jun;5(3):449-52. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-294x.1996.tb00335.x.
We used the random amplified polymorphic DNA technique to determine last male sperm precedence (P2) in the damselfly Calopteryx splendens xanthostoma (Charpentier). We amplified DNA from mothers, putative fathers and from the embryos of individual offspring, and subsequently calculated band-matching coefficients between known first-order relatives (offspring within a clutch) and non-relatives (mothers and fathers) to estimate last-male paternity. The data indicate that, as in other Calopterygidae, P2 is high (0.98) in the bout of oviposition immediately following copulation, despite the fact that the males of this species do not completely remove the sperm of previous males (Siva-Jothy & Hooper 1995).