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Reproductive synchrony in the intertidal amphipod Corophium volutator
Authors:Dean G. McCurdy  J. Sherman Boates   Mark R. Forbes
Abstract:Following logic of the mate-availability hypothesis, females are expected to show asynchronous reproduction in those species where operational sex ratios are female-biased and under circumstances where an individual female is sexually receptive only for short durations. We show that females of the intertidal amphipod Corophium volutator are receptive to mating only for a few days following their moult and are unable to hasten onset of moulting in the presence of a male. Despite meeting the conditions of the mate-availability hypothesis, reproduction was synchronous for female C. volutator across spatial and temporal scales relevant to mate-searching abilities of males. As such, some females are not expected to mate between moults, which coincide with their ability to mate. However, females do moult frequently (relative to males) which should increase their likelihood of mating over their lifetimes. It is unlikely that seasonal constraints, predation, or competition can account for the high degree of synchrony among breeding female amphipods. We suggest that dispersal of females or their offspring may constrain activity of females, as they moulted almost entirely during spring tides (although not always during the same set of spring tides). Female reproductive synchrony also has implications for reproductive behaviour of males, in particular, the possibility of harem-defence polygyny.
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