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  4. Social dominance explains within-ejaculate variation in sperm design in a passerine bird
 
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Social dominance explains within-ejaculate variation in sperm design in a passerine bird

Auteur(s)
Rojas Mora, Alfonso Luis 
Institut de biologie 
Meniri, Magali 
Institut de biologie 
Ciprietti, Sabrina
Helfenstein, Fabrice 
Institut de biologie 
In
BMC Evolutionary Biology, 2017/17/66/1-10
Mots-clés
  • Sperm competition
  • Social hierarchies
  • Within-ejaculate variation
  • Soma vs. germline
  • Sperm morphology
  • Sperm competition

  • Social hierarchies

  • Within-ejaculate vari...

  • Soma vs. germline

  • Sperm morphology

Résumé
Comparative studies suggest that sperm competition exerts stabilizing selection towards an optimal sperm design – e.g., the relative size and covariation of different sperm sections or a quantitative measure of sperm shape - that maximizes male fertility, which results in reduced levels of within-male variation in sperm morphology. Yet, these studies also reveal substantial amounts of unexplained within-ejaculate variance, and the factors presiding to the maintenance of such within-male variation in sperm design at the population level still remain to be identified. Sperm competition models predict that males should progressively invest more resources in their germline as their mating costs increase, i.e., the soma/germline allocation trade-off hypothesis. When access to fertile females is determined by social dominance, the soma/germline allocation trade-off hypothesis predicts that dominant males should invest less in the control of spermatogenesis. Hence, dominance should positively correlate with within-male variance in sperm design.
Identifiants
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/123456789/4991
_
10.1186/s12862-017-0914-2
Type de publication
journal article
Dossier(s) à télécharger
 main article: Rojas_Mora_A.-Social_dominance-20170322.pdf (1.05 MB)
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