2.4 a) Sex and Behaviour - Parental Investment Flashcards
Are there always more sperm than eggs with animals?
Yeah
The production of eggs (with their ___ size and ___ store) requires far more ___ ___ than sperm production.
Which sex has the greater investment?
large, energy, energy investment.
Females
Aside from greater energy investment into gametes, what other investment do…
Non-mammal females have?
What about mammals?
egg structure.
gestation/uterus
Parental investment is costly but increases the probability of ___ and ___ of young.
production, survival
Parental behaviour can be classified into two groups, based on the level of ___ ___ and number of ___ produced.
What are they?
parental investment, offspring.
r-selected
k-selected
(r = ribbit ribbit = frog)
What are the six traits of r selected species?
- smaller
- short lifespan
- limited parental care, leading to low survival rate of offspring
- offspring mature rapidly
- reproduce early in lifespan, often only once
- produce lots of offspring
What are the six traits of k selected species?
- larger
- longer lifespan
- high level of parental care, leading to high survival rate of offspring
- offspring mature slowly
- reproduce later in lifespan, can reproduce many times
- produce few, larger offspring
r-selected species do be:
1. (smaller/larger)
2. (long/short lifespan)
3. (limited/extensive parental care)
4. (low/high offspring survival rate)
5. (mature slowly/rapidly)
6. (reproduce early/late in lifespan)
7. (reproduce only once/many times)
8. (have tons of babies/not many)
- smaller
- short lifespan
- limited parental care
- low offspring survival rate
- mature more rapidly
- reproduce early
- reproduce only once
- tons of babies
r-selection tends to occur in ___ ___, where the species has not reached its ___ ___.
unstable environments, reproductive capacity.
k-selection tends to occur in ___ environments.
stable
Benefits of External Fertilisation… (1)
large number of offspring can be produced
Costs of External Fertilisation… (2)
many gametes predated or not fertilised.
no parental care, so few offspring survive
Benefits of Internal Fertilisation… (3)
Higher chance of successful fertilisation
fewer eggs needed
higher survival rate of offspring due to increased protection of being retained internally
Costs of Internal Fertilisation… (2)
a mate must be located.
requires direct transfer of gametes