131 research outputs found
Using Whole-Group Metabolic Rate and Behaviour to Assess the Energetics of Courtship in Red-Sided Garter Snakes
Reproductive effort is an important aspect of life history as reproductive success is arguably the most important component of fitness. Males tend to compete for access to females and, in the process, expend their energetic capital on mate searching, maleemale competition and courtship rather than directly on offspring. Red-sided garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis, are an exceptional model for studying energetic costs of courtship and mating as they fast during the spring mating season, which segregates the cost of energy acquisition from the cost of courtship and mating. However, measuring an individual male\u27s metabolic rate during courtship is complicated by the fact that male courtship behaviour in redsided garter snakes is dependent on both the detection of a female sexual attractiveness pheromone and on facilitated courtship (i.e. vigorous courtship is only exhibited in the presence of other males). Thus, traditional techniques of placing a mask over the head of individuals would prevent male courtship behaviour, and single animals placed in a flow-through chamber would not yield ecologically realistic levels of courtship, which are only seen in the context of a mating aggregation in this species. Because of these difficulties, we placed groups of males in a flow-through metabolic chamber together with a single female whose respiratory gases were vented outside the chamber to yield a whole-group metabolic rate during competitive courtship. We also measured the standard metabolic rates (SMR) of the males individually for comparison with active metabolic rates. Conservative estimates of peak group metabolic rates during courtship are 10e20 times higher than resting group metabolic rate, which was 1.88 times higher than SMR. These measurements, coupled with the fact that these males are aphagous during the breeding, indicates that costs of courtship may be high for males and has implications for the male mating tactics in this system
Sexual coloration and sperm performance in the Australian painted dragon lizard, Ctenophorus pictus
Theory predicts trade-offs between pre- and post-copulatory sexually selected traits. This relationship may be mediated by the degree to which males are able to monopolize access to females, as this will place an upper limit on the strength of post-copulatory selection. Furthermore, traits that aid in mate monopolization may be costly to maintain and may limit investment in post-copulatory traits, such as sperm performance. Australian painted dragons are polymorphic for the presence or absence of a yellow gular patch (\u27bibs\u27), which may aid them to monopolize access to females. Previous work has shown that there are physiological costs of carrying this bib (greater loss of body condition in the wild). Here, we show that male painted dragons use this bright yellow bib as both an inter- and intrasexual signal, and we assess whether this signal is traded off against sperm performance within the same individuals. We found no relationship between aspects of bib colour and sperm swimming velocity or percentage of motile sperm and suggest that the bib polymorphism may be maintained by complex interactions between physiological or life-history traits including other sperm or ejaculate traits and environmental influences
Size Dependence in Non-sperm Ejaculate Production is Reflected in Daily Energy Expenditure and Resting Metabolic Rate
The non-sperm components of an ejaculate, such as copulatory plugs, can be essential to male reproductive success. But the costs of these ejaculate components are often considered trivial. In polyandrous species, males are predicted to increase energy allocation to the production of non-sperm components, but this allocation is often condition dependent and the energetic costs of their production have never been quantified. Red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis) are an excellent model with which to quantify the energetic costs of non-sperm components of the ejaculate as they exhibit a dissociated reproductive pattern in which sperm production is temporally disjunct from copulatory plug production, mating and plug deposition. We estimated the daily energy expenditure and resting metabolic rate of males after courtship and mating, and used bomb calorimetry to estimate the energy content of copulatory plugs. We found that both daily energy expenditure and resting metabolic rate were significantly higher in small mating males than in courting males, and a single copulatory plug without sperm constitutes 5–18% of daily energy expenditure. To our knowledge, this is the first study to quantify the energetic expense of size-dependent ejaculate strategies in any species
High Altitude Frogs (Rana kukonoris) Adopt a Diversified Bet-hedging Strategy in the Face of Environmental Unpredictability
Environmental unpredictability can influence strategies of maternal investment among eggs within a clutch. Models predict that breeding females should adopt a diversified bet-hedging strategy in unpredictable environments, but empirical field evidence from Asia is scarce. Here we tested this hypothesis by exploring spatial patterns in egg size along an altitudinal gradient in a frog species (Rana kukunoris) inhabiting the Tibetan Plateau. Within-clutch variability in egg size increased as the environment became variable (e.g., lower mean monthly temperature and mean monthly rainfall at higher altitudes), and populations in environments with more unpredictable rainfall produced eggs that were smaller and more variable in size. We provide support for a diversified bet-hedging strategy in high-altitude environments, which experience dynamic weather patterns and therefore are of unpredictable environmental quality. This strategy may be an adaptive response to lower environmental quality and higher unpredictable environmental variance. Such a strategy should increase the likelihood of breeding success and maximize maternal lifetime fitness by producing offspring that are adapted to current environmental conditions. We speculate that in high-altitude environments prone to physical disturbance, breeding females are unable to consistently produce the optimal egg size due to physiological constraints imposed by environmental conditions (e.g., duration of the active season, food availability). Species and populations whose breeding strategies are adapted to cope with uncertain environmental conditions by adjusting offspring size and therefore quality show a remarkable degree of ability to cope with future climatic changes
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Factors influencing paternity in multiply mated female red-sided garter snakes and the persistent use of sperm stored over winter
In some species, sperm is stored within the female reproductive tract for months to years, and yet remains viable to fertilize eggs and produce offspring. Female red-sided garter snakes store sperm for over seven months of winter dormancy. In previous work we demonstrated that these stored sperm account for an average of 25% paternity of a litter when the female mates with a male at spring emergence. Here we tested whether last-male sperm precedence was prevalent when a female mates with two males during the spring. On average, paternity was shared equally among the first (P₁ proportion of paternity of the first male to mate) and second male (P₂) to mate in the spring, and stored sperm (P[subscript ss]), but the variance in paternity was high. Thus, last male sperm precedence may diminish when a female has more than two mates. Male size did not affect paternity, but as the interval between matings increased, P₁ increased at the expense of P[subscript ss]. Interestingly, as the second spring male’s copulation duration increased, P₁ also increased at the expense of P₂. This result suggests that female influence over sperm and/or copulatory plug transfer during matings may also affect which male fathers her offspring in response to coercive matings as we assisted females to mate for their second mating. Finally, all females were spring “virgins”, consequently sperm stored from autumn matings (and/or previous spring matings) remain competitive even when faced with two rivals in sperm competition and is likely the driver of the evolution of sperm longevity.Keywords: Sperm competition, Stored sperm, Mating interval, Sperm precedence, Mate-orde
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Females remate more frequently when mated with sperm-deficient males
Polyandry is a source of sexual conflict and males often try to limit female promiscuity. Consequently, male manipulation of receptivity via antiaphrodisiacs and copulatory plugs that prevent female remating can be a source of sexual conflict. This sexual conflict may be intensified when females must remate for fertility insurance. Male red‐sided garter snakes produce a large, gelatinous copulatory plug that has been proposed to 1) physically prevent remating and 2) contain an antiaphrodisiac that reduces female receptivity. These males may become sperm depleted because of their dissociated reproductive pattern. If a female mates with a sperm deficient male and is also rendered unreceptive to further mating, then this represents a serious conflict. We tested whether female remating frequency is affected when females are mated with a male that produces a sperm‐less copulatory plug. We show that females are significantly more likely to remate after mating with vasectomized males than intact males, even though vasectomized males still produce a copulatory plug. These results suggest that the ejaculate material of the plug does not contain an antiaphrodisiac. Instead, females may use sperm as a cue for post‐copulatory mate assessment and seek to remate for the direct benefit of fertility insurance if they have mated with sperm‐depleted males.Keywords: Sexual conflict, Cryptic female choice, Postcopulatory sexual selection, Garter snake, Sperm limitationKeywords: Sexual conflict, Cryptic female choice, Postcopulatory sexual selection, Garter snake, Sperm limitatio
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Intra‐populational variation of ejaculate traits and sperm depletion in red‐sided garter snakes
Female sexual promiscuity is a prevalent element of mating systems. One consequence of female sexual promiscuity is that male‐male competition often continues post‐copulation within the female’s reproductive tract. According to theory, the number of sperm a male inseminates relative to his rivals strongly predicts his fertilization success. However, sperm quality is also important, especially when males are sperm limited and female sperm storage is prevalent. In this study, we examined intrapopulational variation in sperm numbers and ejaculate quality (sperm mobility) in male red‐sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis) and determined whether these traits varied with male body size and condition over successive matings. We obtained sperm by dissolving copulatory plugs collected from natural matings, which enabled us to also test whether males allocated more sperm to larger, more fecund females. We found significant variation in ejaculate quality among males and that small males transferred as many sperm as large males. Total sperm numbers declined significantly from a male’s first to second ejaculate suggesting that males may become significantly sperm depleted across successive matings. The mass of the relatively sperm‐free posterior portion of the copulatory plug that remained after liberation of sperm was correlated with copulation duration. Males copulated longer with larger females; however, longer copulation durations did 1 not correlate with total sperm. Thus, males may allocate more copulatory plug material to larger females to guard against her remating, instead of allocating more sperm.This is an author's peer-reviewed final manuscript, as accepted by the publisher. The article is copyrighted by the Zoological Society of London and published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. It can be found at: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/%28ISSN%291469-7998.Keywords: sperm mobility, copulatory plug, sperm depletion, ejaculate traits, sperm competitio
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Sexual conflict over mating in red-sided garter snakes (Thamnophis sirtalis) as indicated by experimental manipulation of genitalia
Sexual conflict over mating can result in sex specific morphologies and behaviors that
allow each sex to exert control over the outcome of reproduction. Genital traits, in
particular, are often directly involved in conflict interactions. Via genital manipulation,
we experimentally investigated whether genital traits in red-sided garter snakes influence
copulation duration and formation of a copulatory plug. The hemipenes of male red-sided
garter snakes have a large basal spine that inserts into the female cloaca during mating.
We ablated the spine and found that males were still capable of copulation but copulation
duration was much shorter and copulatory plugs were smaller than those produced by
intact males. We also anesthetized the female cloacal region and found that anesthetized
females copulated longer than control females, suggesting that female cloacal and vaginal
contractions play a role in controlling copulation duration. Both results, combined with
known aspects of the breeding biology of red-sided garter snakes, strongly support the
idea that sexual conflict is involved in mating interactions in this species. Our results
demonstrate the complex interactions among male and female traits generated by
coevolutionary processes in a wild population. Such complexity highlights the
importance of simultaneous examination of male and female traits.Keywords: Sexual conflict,
Genitalia,
Garter snakes,
Copulation duration,
Copulatory plugs,
Hemipene,
Sexual selectio
The Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS): First Results of NH3 mapping the Gould Belt
We present an overview of the first data release (DR1) and first-look science
from the Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS). GAS is a Large Program at the Green
Bank Telescope to map all Gould Belt star-forming regions with
mag visible from the northern hemisphere in emission from NH and other key
molecular tracers. This first release includes the data for four regions in
Gould Belt clouds: B18 in Taurus, NGC 1333 in Perseus, L1688 in Ophiuchus, and
Orion A North in Orion. We compare the NH emission to dust continuum
emission from Herschel, and find that the two tracers correspond closely.
NH is present in over 60\% of lines-of-sight with mag in
three of the four DR1 regions, in agreement with expectations from previous
observations. The sole exception is B18, where NH is detected toward ~ 40\%
of lines-of-sight with mag. Moreover, we find that the NH
emission is generally extended beyond the typical 0.1 pc length scales of dense
cores. We produce maps of the gas kinematics, temperature, and NH column
densities through forward modeling of the hyperfine structure of the NH
(1,1) and (2,2) lines. We show that the NH velocity dispersion,
, and gas kinetic temperature, , vary systematically between
the regions included in this release, with an increase in both the mean value
and spread of and with increasing star formation activity.
The data presented in this paper are publicly available.Comment: 33 pages, 27 figures, accepted to ApJS. Datasets are publicly
available: https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/GAS_DR
Droplets I: Pressure-Dominated Sub-0.1 pc Coherent Structures in L1688 and B18
We present the observation and analysis of newly discovered coherent
structures in the L1688 region of Ophiuchus and the B18 region of Taurus. Using
data from the Green Bank Ammonia Survey (GAS), we identify regions of high
density and near-constant, almost-thermal, velocity dispersion. Eighteen
coherent structures are revealed, twelve in L1688 and six in B18, each of which
shows a sharp "transition to coherence" in velocity dispersion around its
periphery. The identification of these structures provides a chance to study
the coherent structures in molecular clouds statistically. The identified
coherent structures have a typical radius of 0.04 pc and a typical mass of 0.4
Msun, generally smaller than previously known coherent cores identified by
Goodman et al. (1998), Caselli et al. (2002), and Pineda et al. (2010). We call
these structures "droplets." We find that unlike previously known coherent
cores, these structures are not virially bound by self-gravity and are instead
predominantly confined by ambient pressure. The droplets have density profiles
shallower than a critical Bonnor-Ebert sphere, and they have a velocity (VLSR)
distribution consistent with the dense gas motions traced by NH3 emission.
These results point to a potential formation mechanism through pressure
compression and turbulent processes in the dense gas. We present a comparison
with a magnetohydrodynamic simulation of a star-forming region, and we
speculate on the relationship of droplets with larger, gravitationally bound
coherent cores, as well as on the role that droplets and other coherent
structures play in the star formation process.Comment: Accepted by ApJ in April, 201
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