Sunday, November 8, 2009

Earthworms know if the partner is virgin or not!

許多無脊椎動物的雄性都有增加自己的精子在male-male competition下優勢的機制,例如產生交配栓,或是增加精子的排放量。這篇文章顯示蚯蚓這種雌雄同體、異體受精的動物也有類似的情形,牠們在發現交配的對象不是「處女」時,會將精子的射出量提高到三倍,藉以增加自己精子成功受精的數量。

[An earthworm knows if "his" mating partner is virgin or not!]

Brainless but not clueless: earthworms boost their ejaculates when they detect fecund non-virgin partners

Journal
Proc. R. Soc. B (2008) 275 (1638): 1067-1072
Authors
Alberto Velando, Julio Eiroa and Jorge Domı´nguez
Abstract
In many animals in which females store sperm, males may detect female mating status and, in order to outcompete rival sperm, increase ejaculate size when copulating with non-virgin females. Although most studies have been restricted to organisms with separate sexes, theoretical models suggest that sperm competition should also be an important selective agent shaping life-history traits in simultaneous hermaphrodites. Nevertheless, the empirical support for ejaculate adjustment in a mating opportunity is scarce in hermaphrodites. In the present study, we performed a double-mating experiment to determine whether earthworms (Eisenia andrei ) detect the mating status of their partners and whether they respond by adjusting their ejaculate. We found that earthworms triplicated the donated sperm when mating with a non-virgin mate. Moreover, such increases were greater when the worms were mated with larger (more fecund) partners, indicating that earthworms perform a fine-tune control of ejaculate volume. The results of the present study suggest that, under high intensity of sperm competition, partner evaluation is subject to intense selection in hermaphrodite animals, and donors are selective about to whom they donate how much sperm.