L10 Flashcards
Male mallards mate guard to prevent their female copulating with an extra-pair female, what will happen if a male cant mate guard?
if males cant mate guard, timing and frequency of copulation will determine who gains paternity
Do American kestrels mate guard? How do they counter this?
Lack of mate guarding - so males copulate up to 690 times per clutch
Do all behaviourally successful copulations result in sperm transfer?
Zebra finches = 36% of copulations fail
Chickens = 50% of copulations fail
Why would a male not transfer sperm when he had the chance?
- Cape bird, antarctica
- Penguins concentrated on ridges which become snow free earlier
-Adelie penguins are monogamous sea birds - Reclaim previous nest sites by static display
- Females return and pair up with previous partner if present, if not she pairs up with nearest available mate, but then re joins previous male if he arrives late
- Lay two eggs, and an extra if one is lost
- Incubating parent has to guard against Antarctic Skua birds
- Chicks quickly grow and form creches whilst both parents forage food
Parents are vulnerable to sea lions and killer whales
- Penguins concentrated on ridges which become snow free earlier
Copulation in Adelie penguins
- Male solicits copulation by head bowing
Researchers assessed whether insemination occurred
-Researchers assessed whether insemination occurred
3 possible outcomes:
- Ejaculate enters the female’s cloaca
- An ejaculate misses
- No ejaculate is seen
- Researchers recorded outcome and caught female then examined cloacal smears to recorded sperm presence
- If an ejaculate is missed or not seen there is no insemination
- Observations of cloacal ejaculate is not a good contender for tract sperm presence
Two sources of sperm competition in Adelie penguins
- EPCs 9.8% of females-Mate switching 14.9% of females
How widespread is sperm competition in Adelie?
EPCs = 9.8% of females in successful EPCs
Either sex initiated this
Occasionally males tried to force EPC but none of these were successful
Mate switching = 14.9% of females
Prostitution
-Exchanging EPCs for nest material
- Small stones form a platform for which eggs are laid on
- Inadequate platforms are likely to lose eggs by meltwater as they become wet, muddy etc
- Stones collected by both sexes
- Stones are often in demand and some attempt to steal
- Copulation in exchange for stones
- Half took second stones
- Male benefits by gaining EPC for offspring in which he doesn’t have to parental care for
Possible benefits of prostitution behaviour
- Male benefits by gaining EPC for offspring in which he doesn’t have to parental care for
- Female benefits by gaining a source of stones, fertility assurance and good genes as the best males collect stones
Females engage in EPC, so do males ensure insemination at every opportunity?
- Outcompete insemination from other sperm
- 57 copulation attempts
- 42 cloacal contacts
- 25 inseminations
Reasons for failure of pair copulations
-Most failures occur when male dismounts or when cloacal contact is observed but no sperm is drawn in
Sperm limitation
- If males have limited semen supplies consecutive successful ejaculates take longer
Median time elapsed between consecutive successful ejaculates
-Greater than time elapsed between a success and a fail
- Males increase insemination rate towards females fertilisation time
If males have limited semen, time interval would increase through pre-laying period as they run out of sperm
Overall ejaculate interval increased over pre laying period
Suggests sperm is limited in male penguins
What might males do if sperm is limiting?
-Carry on copulating regardless
-Conserve sperm and allocate ejaculate strategies