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1.
In 27% DeBoer's saline (DBS), which yields maximum fertility rates, Xenopus eggs fertilized in vitro are monospermic, regardless of sperm concentration. One block to polyspermy (the “slow” block), described previously, occurs at the fertilization envelope that is elevated in response to the cortical reaction. This paper describes properties of an earlier, “fast” block at the plasma membrane and evaluates the functional significance of the two blocks at physiological sperm concentrations in natural mating conditions. Unfertilized eggs have a resting membrane potential of ?19 mV in 27% DBS. Fertilization triggers a rapid depolarization to +8 mV (the fertilization potential, FP); the potential remains positive for ca. 15 min. Activation of eggs with the ionophore, A23187, produces a slower but similar depolarization (the activation potential, AP). As in other amphibian eggs, the FP appears to result from a net efflux of Cl?, since the peak of the FP (or the AP in ionophore-activated eggs) decreases as the concentration of chloride salts in the medium is increased. In 67% DBS no FP or AP is observed; eggs fertilized in 67% DBS become polyspermic and average 2 sperm entry sites per egg. In the 5–37 mM range, I? and Br?, but not F?, are more effective than Cl? in producing polyspermy. In 20 mM NaI the plasma membrane hyperpolarizes in response to sperm or ionophore; 100% levels of polyspermy and an average of 14 sperm entry sites per egg are observed. NaI does not inhibit or retard elevation of the fertilization envelope; the cortical reaction and fertilization envelope are normal in transmission electron micrographs. In 67% DBS, which also inhibits the fast block, the slow block was estimated to become functional 6–8 min after insemination. Eggs fertilized by natural mating in 20 mM NaI exhibit polyspermy levels of 50–90% and average 5 sperm entry sites per egg. Since eggs become polyspermic when fertilized by natural mating under conditions that inhibit the fast, but not the slow, block to polyspermy, we conclude that the fast block is essential to the prevention of polyspermy at the sperm concentrations normally encountered by the egg.  相似文献   

2.
Evolutionary biologists generally invoke male competition and female choice as mechanisms driving sexual selection. However, in broadcast-spawning organisms sperm may be limiting and females may compete, in the Darwinian sense, for increased mating success. In this study, I investigate how species differences in egg and sperm traits result in different patterns of fertilization among three closely related sea urchins (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, S. franciscanus, and S. droebachiensis). Field studies demonstrate that all three species achieve similar percentages of eggs fertilized when eggs and sperm are released simultaneously. However, when sperm must disperse before encountering eggs, differences arise among species such that those with the smaller eggs and faster but shorter-lived sperm achieve relatively fewer fertilizations than do species with larger eggs and slower but longer-lived sperm. A field hybridization experiment, field estimates of sperm dispersal, correlations of egg size to field rates of fertilization, laboratory studies of fertilization kinetics, and a simulation model all suggest that it is attributes of the egg (probably egg size) that are responsible for the differences. These patterns of fertilization match the species' patterns of dispersion; species that do well only when sperm and eggs are released in close proximity are more aggregated, species that do relatively well when sperm and eggs are released farther apart are more dispersed. These results are consistent with the notion that eggs of different species are adapted to maximize reproductive success under different degrees of sperm limitation and suggest that male competition and female choice may not be an appropriate dichotomy in broadcast-spawning organisms.  相似文献   

3.
In marine invertebrates that spawn by simply releasing their gametes into the water (free-spawning), fertilization success likely is often limited by low sperm concentrations, due to dispersion of mates and dispersal of gametes by water movements. Production of large, low density eggs might be advantageous when sperm concentrations consistently are low, because large target size might increase egg/sperm encounters, and more low than high density eggs could be produced per clutch. Although average fertilization success in the labrid Thalassoma bifasciatum is 95% in both group spawns (in which multiple males compete for fertilizations by producing large quantities of sperm) and pair (mono-male) spawns, it is slightly lower in pair spawns, due to low level sperm limitation that arises because pair-spawning males release near the minimum number of sperm necessary for maximum fertilization. I examined whether variation in egg size and content in T. bifasciatum and other free-spawning fishes is related to variation in spawning mode, to assess whether compensatory production of large, low-density eggs might be contributing to high fertilization success in pair spawns. I found no difference between the volume or density of eggs of (1) pair- and group-spawning females of T. bifasciatum, or (2) pair-and group-spawning congeneric species of labrids, scarids, and serranids, or (3) labrids and scarids with vigorous, rapid spawning movements (which could turbulently diffuse gamete clouds) and those with slow movements. Further, egg density does not decline with increasing egg volume among those fishes. Assuming that egg size can affect fertilization success, then sperm limitation seems unlikely to represent a significant problem for pair-spawning T. bifasciatum, probably because mates place their vents close together during gamete release. The situation regarding sperm limitation in other fishes, and effects of environmentally generated water turbulence on it, are less clear. Interspecific variation in the size and content of these fishes' eggs may relate to provisioning of offspring for different larval life-histories.  相似文献   

4.
Summary

A study of sperm penetration of the egg of the house cricket, Acheta domesticus, using a fluorescent microscope technique, showed that sperm penetration of the chorion, prior to fertilization, is not restricted to a specialised area of the egg surface, such as the micropyle. An acrosomal filament is seen on penetrating sperm. Polyspermy (multiple sperm attachment) is seen under normal conditions.

Eggs fertilized in vitro developed to the 4 day (pre-katatrepsis) stage, but did not undergo katatrepsis. Development was confirmed by cytogenetic studies. The percentage of eggs showing cleavage nuclei (i.e. initial development) was 59% after in vitro fertilization and 5% in ovarian eggs incubated in a hypotonic medium.  相似文献   

5.
The optimal trade-off between offspring size and number can depend on details of the mode of reproduction or development. In marine organisms, broadcast spawning is widespread, and external coats are a common feature of spawned eggs. Egg jelly coats are thought to influence several aspects of fertilization and early development, including the size of the target for sperm, fertilization efficiency, egg suspension time, polyspermy, embryo survival, and fecundity. These costs and benefits of investment in jelly result in trade-offs that can influence optimal reproductive allocation and the evolution of egg size. I develop an optimization model that sequentially incorporates assumptions about the function of egg coats in fertilization. The model predicts large variation in coat size and limited variation in ovum size under a broad range of conditions. Heterogeneity among spawning events further limits the range of ovum sizes predicted to evolve under sperm limitation. In contrast, variation in larval mortality predicts a broad range of optimal ovum sizes that more closely reflects natural variation among broadcast-spawning invertebrates. By decoupling physical and energetic size, egg coats can enhance fertilization, maintain high fecundity, and buffer the evolution of ovum size from variation in spawning conditions.  相似文献   

6.
The possibility that free-spawning marine organisms may be subject to fertilization failure at low population density (due to the effects of sperm dilution) has sparked much interest, but these effects have been demonstrated only in a few species that broadcast their eggs. Some egg-brooding species may overcome dilution effects by filtering low concentrations of sperm from seawater and fertilizing eggs throughout an extended period of time. We examined the effects of population density and size on fertilization in Botryllus schlosseri, a hermaphroditic colonial ascidian that free-spawns sperm, but broods eggs. We experimentally manipulated the size and density of mating groups and surveyed fertilization levels in natural populations that varied in density. Fertilization was not affected by variation in population size or density in either the experimental or natural populations. Near the end of the reproductive season, some eggs may have been fertilized too late to complete development, suggesting a temporal form of sperm limitation that has not been considered in other systems. We also detected greater variability in fertilization levels at lower population density. Nevertheless, these results suggest that caution must be used in extrapolating reported density effects on fertilization to all taxa of free-spawners; density effects may be reduced in brooders that have efficient sperm collection mechanisms.  相似文献   

7.
Organisms with external fertilization are often sperm limited, and in echinoids, larger eggs have a higher probability of fertilization than smaller eggs. This difference is thought to be a result of the more frequent sperm-egg collisions experienced by larger targets. Here we report how two components of egg target size, the egg cell and jelly coat, contributed to fertilization success in a selection experiment. We used a cross-sectional analysis of correlated characters to estimate the selection gradients on egg and jelly-coat size in five replicate male pairs of the sand dollar Dendraster excentricus. Results indicated that eggs with larger cells and jelly coats were preferentially fertilized under sperm limitation in the laboratory. The selection gradients were an average of 922% steeper for egg than for jelly-coat size. The standardized selection gradients for egg and jelly-coat size were similar. Our results suggest that fertilization selection can act on both egg-cell and jelly-coat size but that an increase in egg-cell volume is much more likely to increase fertilization success than an equal change in jelly-coat volume. The strengths of the selection gradients were inversely related to the correlation of egg traits across replicate egg clutches. This result suggests the importance of replication in studies of selection of correlated characters.  相似文献   

8.
Rodrigo Krugner 《BioControl》2014,59(2):167-174
Gonatocerus morrilli (Howard) (Hymenoptera: Mymaridae) is an egg parasitoid used in California, USA to control glassy-winged sharpshooter (GWSS), Homalodisca vitripennis (Germar) (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae). Virgin GWSS females deposit non-fertilized eggs and mated females can exhaust sperm reserves for egg fertilization. However, nothing is known about Gonatocerus spp. performance when using non-fertilized GWSS eggs as hosts. Host age preference for oviposition and suitability of non-fertilized GWSS eggs as hosts for G. morrilli reproduction were investigated to determine whether non-fertilized eggs on sentinel plants could be used to monitor egg parasitoid populations. Gonatocerus morrilli parasitized all ages of GWSS eggs (1–8 days old) regardless if the host egg was fertilized or not. In choice tests (fertilized versus non-fertilized eggs), parasitoids failed to emerge as adults from non-fertilized eggs more often than from fertilized eggs. The results indicate that non-fertilized eggs were accepted by G. morrilli as suitable hosts for oviposition, but were less suitable for immature development compared to fertilized eggs.  相似文献   

9.
Sperm limitation may be an important selective force influencing gamete traits such as egg size. The relatively inexpensive extracellular structures surrounding many marine invertebrate eggs might serve to enhance collision rates without the added cost of increasing the egg cell. However, despite decades of research, the effects of extracellular structures on fertilization have not been conclusively documented. Here, using the sea urchin Lytechinus variegatus, we remove jelly coats from eggs, and we quantify sperm collisions to eggs with jelly coats, eggs without jelly coats, and inert plastic beads. We also quantify fertilization success in both egg treatment groups. We find that sperm-egg collision rates increase as a function of sperm concentration and target size and that sperm are not chemotactically attracted to eggs nor to jelly coats in this species. In fertilization assays, the presence of the jelly coat is correlated with a significant but smaller-than-expected improvement in fertilization success. A pair of optimality models predict that, despite the large difference in the energetic value of egg contents and jelly material, the presence of the jelly coat does not diminish selection for larger egg cell size when sperm are limiting.  相似文献   

10.
The question of whether the acrosome reaction, which leads to fertilization, occurs in intact sperm bound to the zona pellucida of the egg or in intact sperm before contact with the egg, was addressed by assessing the effect of 3-quinuclidinyl benzilate (QNB) on the two types of acrosome reaction. QNB is a specific inhibitor of the fertilization of zona-intact mouse eggs by mouse sperm. Mouse spermatozoa in suspension underwent acrosome reactions at a low rate, which could be accelerated by addition of 5 μM divalent cation ionophore A23187; the occurrence of such acrosome reactions was not inhibited by QNB. The rate at which acrosome reactions occurred in sperm bound to the zona pellucida of cumulus-free eggs, bound to isolated zonae, or exposed to acid-solubilized zona components, was greatly accelerated relative to that observed in the absence of zonae. These acrosome reactions were strongly inhibited by QNB at concentrations which inhibit the fertilization of zona-intact mouse eggs in vitro. These data suggest that the zona pellucida can induce acrosome reactions in mouse spermatozoa and that these acrosome reactions are the ones which lead to the fertilization of zona-intact eggs. In contrast, the acrosome rection in sperm which are not in contact with the zona is not associated with fertilization of zona-intact eggs.  相似文献   

11.
We have examined the relationship between sperm adhesion and fertilization in the cross species insemination of Arbacia punctulata eggs by Strongylocentrotus purpuratus sperm. As previously reported (Kinsey et al., 1980) the addition of S. purpuratus egg jelly results in induction of the acrosome reaction in sperm and significant numbers of S. purpuratus sperm adhere to A. punctulata eggs. However, in the absence of S. purpuratus egg jelly, S. purpuratus sperm fail to bind to A. punctulata eggs. Although at least 200 S. purpuratus sperm bind to an A. punctulata egg in the presence of S. purpuratus jelly, less than 8% of the eggs are fertilized. The adhesion of S. purpuratus sperm meets the same functional criteria as homologous A. punctulata sperm-egg adhesion. Electron microscopy shows that S. purpuratus sperm that have undergone the acrosome reaction adhere to A. punctulata eggs by their bindin-coated acrosomal process in a manner that is morphologically identical to that observed with homologous A. punctulata sperm. We have also compared the ability of S. purpuratus and A. punctulata sperm to fuse and fertilize with A. punctulata eggs after removal of the vitelline layer. Using high levels of sperm of either species, heterologous as well as homologous fertilization is readily detectable. Under these conditions, where stable binding is not demonstrable, there is no difference in the ability of S. purpuratus and A. punctulata sperm to fertilize A. punctulata eggs. These observations suggest that the failure of S. purpuratus sperm to fertilize A. punctulata eggs under normal conditions may be due to their inability to penetrate the vitelline layer so that they can fuse with the egg plasma membrane. In relation to the possible mechanism of vitelline layer penetration, we have also investigated the mode of action of chymostatin, an inhibitor of chymotrypsin that has been reported to inhibit fertilization of sea urchin eggs (Hoshi et al., 1979). Our findings suggest that the fertilization inhibitory activity of chymostatin is not related to its antichymotrypsin activity. Rather, it appears that this inhibition is due to the induction of an abnormal acrosome reaction in sperm that precludes formation of the acrosome process.  相似文献   

12.
Egg sizes of marine invertebrates vary greatly, both within and between species. Among the proposed causes of this are a trade-off between egg size, egg number and survival probability of offspring, and a selection pressure exerted by sperm limitation during external fertilization. Although larger eggs are indeed a larger target for sperm, producing larger eggs also implies making fewer of them. There has been discussion about whether sperm limitation can (theoretically) and does (in nature) select for larger egg size than under ad libitum sperm. In one specific model, based on a particular fertilization kinetics model and an empirically derived mortality function, the theoretical possibility of a negative shift in optimal egg size with sperm concentration was demonstrated. Here we present a generalized analytical model to explore the effects of survival and fertilization probabilities on optimal egg size. It is demonstrated that incorporating fertilization kinetics greatly increases the scope for intermediate optimal egg size, as opposed to eggs of minimal or maximal size. Second, we present a general analytical qualitative solution to the question whether optimal egg size depends on sperm concentration. It is shown that, under the condition that an intermediate optimal egg size exists, this qualitative outcome of the model (positive, negative or no relation between optimal egg size and sperm limitation) depends on the structure of the fertilization kinetics part of the model. Finally, we evaluate fertilization kinetics models with respect to the general solution, using two previously published kinetics models ('Don Giovanni' and 'Don Ottavio') and a novel alteration of one of them in which sperm concentration covaries with egg concentration (Don Ottavio 'tango'). For all three models the relationship between optimal egg size and sperm concentration is shown to be always negative. This paper thus shows how biologically realistic relationships between egg size on the one hand and survival and fertilization probability on the other hand predict optimal egg size to be intermediate, and that this optimum is in general expected to increase when sperm become more limiting.  相似文献   

13.
The unfertilized egg of the newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, has a second meiotic spindle at the animal pole and numerous cortical cytasters. After physiologically polyspermic fertilization, all sperm nuclei incorporated into the egg develop sperm asters, and the cortical cytasters change into bundles of cortical microtubules. The size of the sperm asters in the animal hemisphere is ∼5.6-fold larger than that in the vegetal hemisphere. Only one sperm nucleus moves toward the center of the animal hemisphere to form a zygote nucleus with the egg nucleus. This movement is inhibited by nocodazole, but not by cytochalasin B. The centrosome in the zygote nucleus divides into two parts to form a bipolar spindle for the first cleavage synchronously with the nuclear cycle, but centrosomes of accessory sperm nuclei in the vegetal hemisphere remained to form monopolar interphase asters and subsequently degenerate around the first cleavage stage. The size of sperm asters in monospermically fertilized Xenopus eggs was ∼37-fold larger than those in Cynops eggs. Since sperm asters that formed in polyspermically fertilized Xenopus eggs exclude each other, the formation of a zygote nucleus is inhibited. Cynops sperm nuclei form larger asters in Xenopus eggs, whereas Xenopus sperm nuclei form smaller asters in Cynops eggs compared with those in homologous eggs. Since there was no significant difference in the concentration of monomeric tubulin between those eggs, the size of sperm asters is probably regulated by a component(s) in egg cytoplasm. Smaller asters in physiologically polyspermic newt eggs might be useful for selecting only one sperm nucleus to move toward the egg nucleus. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 47:210–221, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
The eggs of Arbacia and starfish contained about 70 and 25 micrograms of pyruvate per gm. of dry cells respectively. Arbacia eggs utilized added pyruvate, although the O2 uptake did not increase. On fertilization the utilization of pyruvate increased sevenfold. This pyruvate seems to be metabolized, as in other cells, with diphosphothiamine as coenzyme. The diphosphothiamine content of fertilized and non-fertilized eggs was about 16 micrograms; that of sperm, 30 micrograms. Penetration of sperm into the egg and fertilization with cell division to the pluteus stage did not bring forth appearance of succino-dehydrogenase. The possible mechanism of fertilization and cell division is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Ovulated, unfertilized eggs of sea lamprey Petromyzon marinus could be stored for 1 day at 15° C without significant loss of fertilizing ability. After 2 days storage most eggs could still be fertilized. Lamprey semen could be stored up to 1 day. Thereafter, a decrease in sperm fertilizing ability occurred, accompanied with a decrease in sperm motility. Unlike teleost fish, sea lamprey eggs could still be fertilized after 1 h contact with water. This extended time of gamete fertility after release into water may help to account for the reproductive success of this species. Maximal fertilization rates were obtained at a sperm: egg ratio of 50 000, a ratio recommended for studies on fertility of individual males. Assessing fertilization success 3 min after fertilization (at cytoplasmic bleb stage) or 5 h after fertilization (at two–cell embryo) was strongly correlated ( r =0·92 and 0·98) with estimation and fertilization success at hatching. These results offer improvement in artificial fertilization techniques under laboratory conditions and provide new information on the biology of fertilization in sea lamprey.  相似文献   

16.
Androdioecy (populations comprised of mixtures of males and hermaphrodites) is a rare mating system, found only in a few plants and animals. The rarity of this system stems from the limited benefits to males in an otherwise all-hermaphroditic population. One of the potential benefits to males is typified by the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, in which hermaphrodites do not produce sufficient sperm to fertilize all of their eggs. Here we explore the possibility that males are needed for complete fertilization of hermaphrodites' eggs in a second androdioecious animal, the clam shrimp Eulimnadia texana. We compare the fertilization rate of outcrossed to selfed eggs to test whether the latter exhibit lower fertilization due to sperm limitation (as in C. elegans). Because this comparison confounds differences in egg fertilization due to sperm limitation with the potential for early inbreeding depression, we also used a third mating treatment, a brother/sister cross, to allow separation of sperm limitation from inbreeding depression. In both populations examined, the proportion of eggs that were fertilized decreased linearly with increasing relatedness: comparing eggs produced by outcrossing, brother/sister, and selfed matings, respectively. This pattern suggests that differences in fertilization among these three treatments were caused solely by inbreeding depression, and therefore that hermaphrodites are not sperm limited. These results are combined with previous data on this species to test whether the maintenance of males can be explained using a population genetics model specifically designed for this species.  相似文献   

17.
Measurements of 45Ca flux into and out of Urechis eggs indicate that, during the first 10 min after insemination, the eggs take up 0.24 pmole of Ca/egg. Total egg Ca measured by atomic absorption (AA) spectroscopy increased by 0.23 pmole of Ca/egg (0.56, 0.79, and 0.76 pmole of Ca/egg for unfertilized, 10-min fertilized, and 60-min fertilized eggs, respectively). Thus, the total change in egg Ca is accounted for by the influx even though the rate of efflux, measured as a release of 45Ca from preloaded eggs, increases to twice the unfertilized rate by 15 min. The fertilization influx follows saturation kinetics (Ka = 1.3 mM). It is competitively inhibited by procaine, but is not inhibited by dinitrophenol, mersalyl acid, or ruthenium red. Ten percent of the total Ca influx has occurred by 10 sec, and it is, therefore, the most rapid response to fertilization yet known in these eggs. The influx is also observed in eggs partially activated by insemination in pH 7 seawater (SW); the other fertilization responses, except sperm penetration, do not occur in pH 7 SW. Although Ca influx alone is insufficient to activate the eggs, it may be a prerequisite for cytoplasmic activation and development, inducing other secondary responses which are prevented by low external pH.  相似文献   

18.
Sperm-egg interaction in mammals is initiated by binding of sperm to the zona pellucida, an acellular coat completely surrounding the plasma membrane of unfertilized eggs and preimplantation embryos. Fertilization results in transformation of the zona pellucida (“zona reaction”), such that additional sperm are unable to bind to the zona pellucida of fertilized eggs and embryos, and sperm that had partially penetrated the zona pellucida of eggs prior to fertilization are prevented from further penetration after fertilization. The failure of sperm to bind to fertilized mouse eggs and embryos is attributable to modification of the sperm receptor, ZP3, an 83,000-molecular weight glycoprotein present in zonae pellucidae isolated from both eggs and embryos [Bleil, J. D., and Wassarman, P. M. (1980). Cell, 20, 873–882]. In this investigation, ZP2, the major glycoprotein found in mouse zonae pellucidae [Bleil, J. D., and Wassarman, P. M. (1980). Develop. Biol., 76, 185–202] was analyzed by gel electrophoresis under a variety of conditions in order to determine whether or not it undergoes modification as a result of fertilization. Under nonreducing conditions, ZP2 present in solubilized zonae pellucidae that were isolated individually from mouse oocytes, eggs, and embryos migrates on SDS-polyacrylamide gels with an apparent molecular weight of 120,000. However, under reducing conditions, ZP2 from embryos, but not from oocytes or unfertilized eggs, migrates with an apparent molecular weight of 90,000 and has been designated ZP2f. The evidence presented suggests that modification of ZP2 following fertilization involves proteolysis of the glycoprotein, but that intramolecular disulfide bonds prevent the release of peptide fragments. It is shown that the same change in ZP2 can be generated in vitro by artificial activation of unfertilized mouse eggs with the calcium ionophore A23187, thus eliminating the possibility that a sperm component is responsible for the modification of ZP2 following fertilization. These results suggest that some of the changes in the biochemical and biological properties of zonae pellucidae, observed following fertilization or activation of mouse eggs, result from modification of the major zona pellucida glycoprotein, ZP2.  相似文献   

19.
The provisioning of offspring can have far-reaching consequences for later life in a wide range of organisms and generally this provisioning is thought to be under maternal influence or control. In experiments with a broadcast-spawning ascidian, we found that the size of offspring was determined by egg size and the abundance of sperm present during fertilization. Larger eggs were fertilized at low sperm concentrations, whilst smaller eggs were successfully fertilized at high sperm concentrations. These differences in fertilized egg size resulted in differences in the development rate, hatching success and mean size of the subsequent larvae. Our results suggest that, in contrast to females that reproduce by other mating systems, free-spawning mothers lack some control over the provisioning of offspring. Furthermore, because males can alter the sperm environment, they can exert paternal (non-genetic) control over key offspring characteristics.  相似文献   

20.
When the availability of sperm limits female reproductive success, competition for sperm, may be an important broker of sexual selection. This is because sperm limitation can increase the variance in female reproductive success, resulting in strong selection on females to compete for limited fertilization opportunities. Sperm limitation is probably common in broadcast-spawning marine invertebrates, making these excellent candidates for investigating scramble competition between broods of eggs and its consequences for female reproductive success. Here, we report our findings from a series of experiments that investigate egg competition in the sessile, broadcast-spawning polychaete Galeolaria caespitosa. We initially tested whether the order in which eggs encounter sperm affects their fertilization success at two ecologically relevant current regimes. We used a split-clutch-split--ejaculate technique to compare the fertilization success of eggs from individual females that had either first access (competition-free treatment) or second access (egg competition treatment) to a batch of sperm. We found that fertilization success depended on the order in which eggs accessed sperm; eggs that were assigned to the competition-free treatment exhibited significantly higher fertilization rates than those assigned to the egg competition treatment at both current speeds. In subsequent experiments we found that prior exposure of sperm to eggs significantly reduced both the quantity and quality of sperm available to fertilize a second clutch of eggs, resulting in reductions in fertilization success at high and low sperm concentrations. These findings suggest that female traits that increase the likelihood of sperm-egg interactions (e.g. egg size) will respond to selection imposed by egg competition.  相似文献   

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