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Hypodermic self-insemination as a reproductive assurance strategy
Authors:Steven A. Ramm  Aline Schlatter  Maude Poirier  Lukas Sch?rer
Affiliation:1.Evolutionary Biology, Zoological Institute, University of Basel, Basel 4051, Switzerland;2.Evolutionary Biology, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld 33615, Germany
Abstract:
Self-fertilization occurs in a broad range of hermaphroditic plants and animals, and is often thought to evolve as a reproductive assurance strategy under ecological conditions that disfavour or prevent outcrossing. Nevertheless, selfing ability is far from ubiquitous among hermaphrodites, and may be constrained in taxa where the male and female gametes of the same individual cannot easily meet. Here, we report an extraordinary selfing mechanism in one such species, the free-living flatworm Macrostomum hystrix. To test the hypothesis that adaptations to hypodermic insemination of the mating partner under outcrossing also facilitate selfing, we experimentally manipulated the social environment of these transparent flatworms and then observed the spatial distribution of received sperm in vivo. We find that this distribution differs radically between conditions allowing or preventing outcrossing, implying that isolated individuals use their needle-like stylet (male copulatory organ) to inject own sperm into their anterior body region, including into their own head, from where they then apparently migrate to the site of (self-)fertilization. Conferring the ability to self could thus be an additional consequence of hypodermic insemination, a widespread fertilization mode that is especially prevalent among simultaneously hermaphroditic animals and probably evolves due to sexual conflict over the transfer and subsequent fate of sperm.
Keywords:hypodermic insemination   mating system   self-fertilization   simultaneous hermaphrodite   sexual conflict   traumatic insemination
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