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Costs and benefits of giant sperm and sperm storage organs in Drosophila melanogaster
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Abstract
In
Drosophila
, long sperm are favoured in sperm competition based on the length of the female's primary sperm storage organ, the seminal receptacle (
SR
). This sperm–
SR
interaction, together with a genetic correlation between the traits, suggests that the coevolution of exaggerated sperm and
SR
lengths may be driven by Fisherian runaway selection. Here, we explore the costs and benefits of long sperm and
SR
genotypes, both in the sex that carries them and in the sex that does not. We measured male and female fitness in inbred lines of
Drosophila melanogaster
derived from four populations previously selected for long sperm, short sperm, long
SR
s or short
SR
s. We specifically asked: What are the costs and benefits of long sperm in males and long
SR
s in females? Furthermore, do genotypes that generate long sperm in males or long
SR
s in females impose a fitness cost on the opposite sex? Answers to these questions will address whether long sperm are an honest indicator of male fitness, male post‐copulatory success is associated with male precopulatory success, female choice benefits females or is costly, and intragenomic conflict could influence evolution of these traits. We found that both sexes have increased longevity in long sperm and long
SR
genotypes. Males, but not females, from long
SR
lines had higher fecundity. Our results suggest that sperm–
SR
coevolution is facilitated by both increased viability and indirect benefits of long sperm and
SR
s in both sexes.
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Costs and benefits of giant sperm and sperm storage organs in
Drosophila melanogaster
Description:
Abstract
In
Drosophila
, long sperm are favoured in sperm competition based on the length of the female's primary sperm storage organ, the seminal receptacle (
SR
).
This sperm–
SR
interaction, together with a genetic correlation between the traits, suggests that the coevolution of exaggerated sperm and
SR
lengths may be driven by Fisherian runaway selection.
Here, we explore the costs and benefits of long sperm and
SR
genotypes, both in the sex that carries them and in the sex that does not.
We measured male and female fitness in inbred lines of
Drosophila melanogaster
derived from four populations previously selected for long sperm, short sperm, long
SR
s or short
SR
s.
We specifically asked: What are the costs and benefits of long sperm in males and long
SR
s in females? Furthermore, do genotypes that generate long sperm in males or long
SR
s in females impose a fitness cost on the opposite sex? Answers to these questions will address whether long sperm are an honest indicator of male fitness, male post‐copulatory success is associated with male precopulatory success, female choice benefits females or is costly, and intragenomic conflict could influence evolution of these traits.
We found that both sexes have increased longevity in long sperm and long
SR
genotypes.
Males, but not females, from long
SR
lines had higher fecundity.
Our results suggest that sperm–
SR
coevolution is facilitated by both increased viability and indirect benefits of long sperm and
SR
s in both sexes.
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