鸟类的精子竞争。

T R Birkhead
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引用次数: 485

摘要

在鸟类中,当一个雌性在一个繁殖周期内被多个雄性授精时,就会发生精子竞争。尽管大多数鸟类在社会上实行一夫一妻制,但精子竞争很普遍,并导致频繁的额外配对父亲。精子竞争是性选择的基本组成部分,因为它导致雄性之间繁殖成功率的差异。男性对精子竞争的适应包括相对较大的睾丸,大量的精子储存和较长的精子,配偶保护和频繁的配对交配。雌性对精子竞争没有表现出明显的形态适应,但通过控制交配是否成功,它们可能决定了交配的频率和程度。尽管如此,人们对雌性从额外配对受精中获得的进化益处知之甚少。用两个雄性的同等数量的精子对雌性进行授精的实验通常显示最后一个雄性的精子优先。要理解精子竞争的机制,就需要理解为什么最后一个与雌性受精的雄性会使数量不成比例的卵子受精。对家禽、火鸡和斑胸草雀精子竞争的研究数据仅与精子竞争的被动精子损失模型相一致。其机制是这样的:授精后,精子进入位于输卵管内的精子储存管,在数天或数周内以恒定的速率从那里丢失。在其他条件相同的情况下,两次授精之间的间隔决定了受精的可能性:两次授精中的第二次使大多数卵子受精,仅仅是因为在受精发生时,这些精子丢失的较少。其他因素也影响精子竞争的结果:相对于产卵的授精时间、雄性授精能力的差异和受精卵数量的差异;因此,最后一个男性精子的优先权并不是自动的。根据精子竞争的机制,雄性和雌性最大化其额外配对受精可能性的最佳策略是在产卵开始前尽可能与额外配对伴侣交配。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sperm competition in birds.

Sperm competition in birds occurs when a female is inseminated by more than one male during a single breeding cycle. Despite most birds being socially monogamous, sperm competition is widespread and results in frequent extra-pair paternity. Sperm competition is a fundamental part of sexual selection since it results in differential reproductive success among males. Male adaptations to sperm competition include relatively large testes, large sperm stores and long spermatozoa, mate guarding and frequent pair copulations. Females show no obvious morphological adaptations to sperm competition but, by controlling whether copulations are successful, they probably determine its frequency and extent. Despite this, the evolutionary benefits females acquire from extra-pair fertilizations are poorly understood. Experiments in which females are inseminated with equal numbers of spermatozoa from two males usually show last male sperm precedence. Understanding the mechanism of sperm competition requires understanding of why the last male to inseminate a female fertilizes a disproportionate number of eggs. The data from sperm competition studies on the domestic fowl, turkeys and zebra finches are consistent only with a passive sperm loss model of sperm competition. The mechanism is as follows: after insemination, spermatozoa enter the sperm storage tubules located in the oviduct, from which they are lost at a constant rate over days or weeks. All else being equal, the interval between two inseminations determines the probability of fertilization: the second of two inseminations fertilizes most eggs simply because, by the time fertilization occurs, fewer of these spermatozoa have been lost. Other factors also affect the outcome of sperm competition: the timing of insemination relative to oviposition, the differential fertilizing capacity of males and differences in the numbers of spermatozoa inseminated; as a consequence, last male sperm precedence is not automatic. On the basis of the mechanism of sperm competition, the optimal strategy for both males and females to maximize their likelihood of extra-pair fertilization is to copulate with an extra-pair partner as close as possible to the onset of oviposition.

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