info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Copulatory behaviour increases sperm viability in female spiders
Fecha
2020-09-20Registro en:
Cargnelutti, Franco Ignacio; Calbacho Rosa, Lucía Soledad; Uñates, Diego Rafael; Costa Schmidt, Luiz Ernesto; Córdoba-Aguilar, Alex; et al.; Copulatory behaviour increases sperm viability in female spiders; Wiley Blackwell Publishing, Inc; Biological Journal of The Linnean Society; 131; 3; 20-9-2020; 536-546
0024-4066
1095-8312
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Cargnelutti, Franco Ignacio
Calbacho Rosa, Lucía Soledad
Uñates, Diego Rafael
Costa Schmidt, Luiz Ernesto
Córdoba-Aguilar, Alex
Peretti, Alfredo Vicente
Resumen
One remarkable reproductive feature in animals with internal fertilization is a reduction in sperm viability over time in females. Whether this reduction is driven by male-male competition and/or cryptic female choice is unclear. From the perspective of cryptic female choice, we postulated that sperm viability is affected by a particular male copulatory behaviour. In this study, we investigated the following aspects: (1) sperm viability in mated females vs. males; (2) whether sperm viability varies temporally after mating; and (3) whether male copulatory behaviour covaries positively with sperm viability within females. We used the spider Holocnemus pluchei, whose males use several copulatory behaviours to court females. We found that females that stored sperm for 4 or 15 days showed no difference in sperm viability but had lower sperm viability compared with males, and males that performed a longer post-insemination behaviour had higher sperm viability inside the female. It is unclear how sperm viability is reduced and how male post-insemination behaviour affects this. It is possible that extending copulation allows males to induce females to keep sperm alive for longer. This result is predicted by theory whereby males induce females to facilitate sperm to reach and fertilize eggs based on male postcopulatory behaviour.