Fryer T, Cannings C, Vickers G T
School of Mathematics and Statistics, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7RH, U.K.
J Theor Biol. 1999 Jan 7;196(1):81-100. doi: 10.1006/jtbi.1998.0822.
We examine models of sperm competition to determine which strategies are evolutionarily stable according to game theory. Games are considered in which the males of a species must divide a fixed amount of sperm between a fixed number of rounds in competition over fertilization of a given set of eggs. Sperm success with a single female is allocated using the raffle principle". A two round model is formulated and we show that the evolutionarily stable strategy (ESS) is a pure strategy in which a male should use at least half his sperm in the first round if given the opportunity to mate. The ESS is unique and globally stable, in contrast to most classical ESSs which are only locally stable. The model is extended to include the effects of sperm replenishment and egg oviposition between rounds. Both serve to increase the ESS amount of sperm inseminated in round one.
我们研究精子竞争模型,以根据博弈论确定哪些策略在进化上是稳定的。我们考虑这样的博弈:一个物种的雄性必须在固定数量的轮次中,在给定的一组卵子受精竞争中分配固定数量的精子。单个雌性的精子成功受精是根据抽奖原则来分配的。我们构建了一个两轮模型,并表明进化稳定策略(ESS)是一种纯策略,即如果有机会交配,雄性应在第一轮中使用至少一半的精子。与大多数仅局部稳定的经典ESS不同,该ESS是唯一且全局稳定的。该模型被扩展以包括轮次间精子补充和卵子产卵的影响。这两者都有助于增加第一轮授精的ESS精子数量。