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Sophisticated sperm allocation in male fowl

Tommaso Pizzari (), Charles K. Cornwallis, Hanne Løvlie, Sven Jakobsson and Tim R. Birkhead
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Tommaso Pizzari: Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Charles K. Cornwallis: University of Sheffield
Hanne Løvlie: Stockholm University
Sven Jakobsson: Stockholm University
Tim R. Birkhead: University of Sheffield

Nature, 2003, vol. 426, issue 6962, 70-74

Abstract: Abstract When a female is sexually promiscuous, the ejaculates of different males compete for the fertilization of her eggs1; the more sperm a male inseminates into a female, the more likely he is to fertilize her eggs2. Because sperm production is limited and costly, theory predicts that males will strategically allocate sperm (1) according to female promiscuity1,3,4,5, (2) saving some for copulations with new females3,6,7, and (3) to females producing more and/or better offspring3,8. Whether males allocate sperm in all of these ways is not known, particularly in birds where the collection of natural ejaculates only recently became possible. Here we demonstrate male sperm allocation of unprecedented sophistication in the fowl Gallus gallus. Males show status-dependent sperm investment in females according to the level of female promiscuity; they progressively reduce sperm investment in a particular female but, on encountering a new female, instantaneously increase their sperm investment; and they preferentially allocate sperm to females with large sexual ornaments signalling superior maternal investment. Our results indicate that female promiscuity leads to the evolution of sophisticated male sexual behaviour.

Date: 2003
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DOI: 10.1038/nature02004

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