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1.
Egg cannibalism by hatchlings has been demonstrated in somepulmonate land snails; this behaviour is promoted by a highhatching asynchrony within the egg-batch. Under laboratory conditions,the percentage of new-born snails Helix aspersa having cannibalisedunhatched eggs was not influenced by the soil factor: about70% of them ingested one egg within their first four days oflife whether soil was present or not. The propensity to eggcannibalism in hatchlings of H. aspersa increased with egg density.However, most of the new-born hatchlings consumed a single eggduring the four days following hatching, and only exceptionallytwo. The consumption of one egg increased the snails wet weightby 38.7% within four days. A weak ingestion of soil componentsalso occurred, but it induced a growth that was three-timesless than that due to the consumption of an egg. In addition,the survival of newly hatched snails maintained under non-dehydratingthermohygrometric conditions was high, even when they were submittedto four days food-deprivation. (Received 22 July 1999; accepted 24 November 1999)  相似文献   

2.
Relatively little is known about the mating behaviour of hermaphroditefreshwater snails, many of which transmit the Schistosoma trematodesamong humans in developing countries. Knowledge of the breedingbiology of these snails could help in the design of schistosomecontrol programmes, as well as possibly contributing to ourunderstanding of the evolution of simultaneous hermaphroditismin animaL. Here we describe an experiment investigating thepatterns of sexual roles adopted by the Schistosoma mansoni-vectotsnail, Btmphalaria glabrata. During observations on groups offreely interacting snails, no individuals copulated significantlymore often in the male than in the female role, or vice versa.Only one individual showed a pattern of alternating sexual rolesover successive matings that differed significantly from a randomsequence of roles. There was no evidence for reciprocal copulationwith one particular partner, either between consecutive matings(unless they were temporarily isolated from other snails) orbetween non-consecutive matings (separated by copulations withother conspccifics). We discuss these results in the contextof sex allocation and ESS mating strategy theories. *Present address (or correspondence 1 G VERNON. Bioscan (UK).Standingford House, Cave Street, St. Clements, Oxford OX4 IBA. (Received 5 October 1995; accepted 6 November 1995)  相似文献   

3.
The number of mating pairs, the size of the mating partners,and the distribution of individuals of Vivi-parus ater on agrid in Lake Zürich were recorded during one breeding seasonin 1990. There was positive assortative mating with respectto shell size. The proportion of copulating individuals rangedfrom 1% to 6% (average 3%) of the active population at any onetime. Individual snails copulated 60 times on average from Apriluntil November. Snails were abundant and copulated in shallowwater close to the shore in Spring. They moved towards deeperareas in Autumn. V. ater copulated on all substrates at anydepth (1–9 m)of the grid. The spatial distribution ofcopulations throughout the summer reflected the pattern of snailabundance. (Received 29 January 1993; accepted 14 November 1994)  相似文献   

4.
Experiments have been carried out to determine whether cross–fertilization, multiple insemination and sperm sharing occur in Bulinus cernicus. Snails collected from Canal La Paix, Mauritius, were found to be polymorphic for glucose phosphate isomerase, and from this stock three snail colonies homozygous for GPI 2/2, GPI4/4 and GPI6/6 were selected. Thus, three markers were available to monitor cross–fertilization. Isolated snails produced egg–masses by self–fertilization 40 days post–hatching. Egg–masses produced by self–fertilizing individuals tended to be smaller than those from cross–fertilizing snails, 367 eggs per egg–mass as opposed to 5–34. The majority of snails (70%) switched rapidly to cross–fertilization after pairing. Multiple insemination by two partners was common, heterozygous progeny were produced in a random manner and did not reflect the sequence of mating. No evidence of sperm sharing was found, snails were found to be capable of passing on their own sperm while still producing eggs fertilized by sperm received from an earlier mating. Differences in mating behaviour were noted between snails representing the homozygous GPI colonies, with snails from one colony adopting the female role more readily than those from the other two, which predominantly mated as males.  相似文献   

5.
Sexual selection and sexual conflict have been shown to playkey roles in the evolution of species with separate sexes. Experimentalevidence is accumulating that this is also true for simultaneoushermaphrodites. For example, many species of land snails forcefullystab their mating partners with love darts. In the brown gardensnail (Helix aspersa, now called Cantareus asperses), this dartincreases sperm storage and paternity, probably via the transferof an allohormone that inhibits sperm digestion. A recent interspeciescomparison of dart-possessing land snails revealed coevolutionbetween darts and spermatophore-receiving organs that is consistentwith counteradaptation against an allohormonal manipulation.The great pond snail (Lymnaea stagnalis) seems to use a seminalproduct to manipulate its partner and mates in the male rolewhen enough seminal fluid is available in the prostate gland.Receipt of semen not only initiates egg laying in virgin animals,but also feminizes the mating partner later in life. These increasesin the female function have been shown to go at the expenseof growth and seminal fluid production of the sperm recipient.Although in Helix, and probably also Lymnaea, the sperm donorbenefits from the induced changes through increased fertilizationsuccess, the sperm recipient may experience injury, imposedreallocation of resources, and altered sperm storage. Thesefindings support the existence of sexual conflict in simultaneouslyhermaphroditic snails, and its importance for the evolutionof mating behaviors and reproductive morphologies is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
Xeropicta derbentina (Krynicki, 1836), a native of Eastern MediterraneanEurope, was introduced to southeastern France during the 1940sand is now widely spread across Provence. In summer it aggregateson plants, making its populations clearly visible. However,its life cycle within the Mediterranean basin is poorly documented.While X. derbentina in its native area exhibits an annual lifecycle, this species has been found in Provence to have a bienniallife cycle. Moreover, in southeastern France, field studieswithin a restricted area show variations in demographic structure.In consequence, the life cycle of X. derbentina and the demographicpatterns observed require clarification. Five populations withvarious demographic structures were studied over 1 year in thesame location, i.e. under the same climatic conditions. Thefield study was complemented by laboratory observations on mating,egg-laying and hatching. Xeropicta derbentina appears to bea semelparous species, with an annual life cycle being foundon four plots. The reproductive period begins at the end ofsummer and lasts until the beginning of winter. First egg-layingoccurs within 1 week after mating and lasts up to 30 days. Hatchingtakes place 15–20 days after egg-laying. Xeropicta derbentinapossesses multiple mating and egg-laying sessions, involvingsuccessive hatching. Populations are mainly characterized bytwo growth stages, the first in spring when newly-hatched snailsevolve into juveniles, and the second in late summer when theyreach maturity. However, on the highest density plot, a bienniallife cycle is observed for some newly-hatched snails that showan interrupted growth during summer and evolve into juvenilesonly in the second autumn. Moreover, this life cycle not onlyvaries among plots but also at a 1-year interval within plots.Hence, the life span of X. derbentina is between 12 and 20 months,but can be extended up to 30 months according to whether hatchingoccurs early or late and whether they survive the first andsecond winters. Xeropicta derbentina is thus able to have variousgrowth speeds and life spans, and appears to switch from anannual life cycle to a biennial cycle in response to populationdensity or climatic conditions. (Received 8 October 2004; accepted 15 December 2004)  相似文献   

7.
Mating behaviour of the hermaphroditic sea hare Aplysia kurodaiBaba was observed in the field to investigate the effects ofbody size on various mating features. Compared with small individuals,large gastropods mated with more partners both as males andas females, and also with larger partners (size-assor-tativemating). Large gastropods also mated more frequently as femalesbut not as males, and tended to be selected as female matingpartners more often than small ones by neighbouring individualsbut not as male partners. All these results suggest some matingadvantage of large individuals over small ones as females, probablybecause of the preference by male partners for large femalepartners. At the same time, the results suggest that the matingadvantage of large size as males may be limited, if any. Thepreference for large female partners is also consistent withthe fact that their mating was longer than that of small ones.The greater advantage of large size in mating as females, thanas males, means that sexual selection at mate determinationacts more strongly on female size than on male size and thatthe direction of total sexual selection at mating is probablyreversed in this hermaphrodite (Received 27 November 1995; accepted 8 February 1996)  相似文献   

8.
Young Bulinus (Physopsis) globosus performed male copulatoryactivity and cross-fertilized other snails before their femalereproductive tracts were mature. The two most immature snailsshowed preputial eversion when secretion was present only inthe muciparous gland and at the carrefour region of the oviduct.Sixteen snails showed preputial eversion and four snails cross-fertilizedother snails when their oothecal glands and/or major portionof the oviducts contained either no secretion or only scantyamounts. When paired with a partner snail for 12 or 20 consecutive days,adult snails copulated as males on approximately 60% of thedays paired and up to 8 consecutive days. Virgin snails raisedin isolation copulated as male at the same rate as non-virgin,community-raised snails. Ability to copulate as male was notdependent upon previous experience as male or female. Aftera single copulation as male after 7 days isolation, the hermaphroditicducts of maleacting snails contained 87 000 sperm. Sperm productionoccurred at approximately 50 000 sperm.d-1, until at 10 dayspost-copulation, snails contained 639 000 sperm. (Received 25 May 1982;  相似文献   

9.
We examined whether gender role in the simultaneous hermaphroditefreshwater snail, Physa acuta, is determined by relative bodysize in a manner predicted by the size-advantage model. We observedthe body-size combinations of pairs in the laboratory by usingfield-collected populations. Smaller individuals tended to playthe "male" role (sperm donor), and larger snails the "female"(sperm recipient). Next, we analyzed the mating behaviors involvedin gender-role decision in snail pairs of three different body-sizecombinations, using "large" and "small" snails. Smaller snailswere more likely to approach the partner as a male in different-sizecombination (large/small), whereas frequent initial approachesas a male and rejection behavior as a female were observed inthe large/large combination. Third, we examined the body sizepreference when a snail can freely choose the partner from twoother individuals of different body sizes (large/large/smallor large/small/small). Small individuals had a significant tendencyto act as the male and positively selected large snails as thefemale partner in both triple combinations. However, the largeindividual acted as both the male and the female with nearlyequal frequency. In the size-differing pairings, copulationsoccurred after fewer male approaches and fewer rejections thanin pairings involving two large snails, suggesting that bodysize difference is one of the behavioral solutions in genderconflict. Clear gender-role switching associated with body sizewas not seen. Smaller snails thus have a tendency to play themale role more frequently but adopt both gender roles when theirbody size is sufficiently large.  相似文献   

10.
Each of 8 snails in 2 groups of Bulinus (Physopsis) globosus,1 group raised in isolation and 1 group raised in community,were paired for 14 consecutive days with a male-acting partnersnail. In each group, the experimental snails, which were notallowed to act as males, were able to copulate as females onapproximately 94% of the days paired. Two copulations as female,with the same male partner, occurred on 50% of the days thatthe snails were paired, in the 2 groups combined. Non-receptivefemale behaviour by the experimental snails occurred frequently,and copulation was prevented by such behaviour during 6 pairings,3 in each group. Young B. (P.) africanus first copulated as females when theywere 31–33 days old. The accessory sex glands of the femalereproductive tracts of these young female-acting snails containedmoderate to large amounts of secretion. B. (P.) africanus, which were raised in pairs, laidcross-fertilizedeggs in isolation for an average of 76 days, and 1559 eggs/snailwere deposited before cross-fertilization ceased. Cross-fertilizedeggs were produced for as long as 120 days. After 1 copulation as female, virgin B. (P.) africanus laidcross-fertilized eggs for an average of 78 days and deposited3654 eggs/snail before crossfertilization ceased. Cross-fertilizedeggs were produced for as long as 113 days. After 2 copulationsas female, 1 copulation on each of 2 consecutive days, virginB. (P.) africanus laid cross-fertilized eggs for an averageof 102 days and produced 4397 eggs/snail before cross-fertilizationceased. Cross-fertilized eggs were produced for as long as 123days. Snails which were homozygous for an allele governing mantlepigment pattern were raised with a partner which was homozygousfor a different pigment pattern. Young produced in a 4-day periodafter the snails were isolated were 100% heterozygous. The snailswere then rearranged into pairs with a partner of the same genotypefor 4 days, during which time 26% of the young produced werehomozygous. The snails were again isolated for 4 days, and 49%of the young produced during this 4-day period were homozygous.The results of this experiment strongly suggest that multipleoutcrossing occurred. In B. (P.) africanus, stored allosperm were used to fertilizeeggs after 1, 4 and 7 weeks of starvation; after 1 and 4 weeksof 15°C low temperature and 4 weeks of 15°C + 4 weeksof 10°C low temperature; and after 1 and 4 weeks of desiccation.After 8 weeks of desiccation, 2 of 3 surviving snails reproducedby self-fertilization and 1 snail did not reproduce. Too fewsnails survived 8 weeks of desiccation for a conclusion to bereached on the ability of allosperm to survive. (Received 1 June 1984;  相似文献   

11.
In promiscuous species with sperm storage, males are expected to show a preference for mating with virgin and young females to reduce the risk of sperm competition. In the simultaneous hermaphrodite land snail Arianta arbustorum, sperm production precedes egg production by 2–4 weeks, resulting in a short period of protandric hermaphroditism before shell growth is completed. In natural populations, copulating pairs involving individuals which have not yet completed shell growth (virgins) have been observed. We ran a series of mate-choice experiments to examine whether virgin and nonvirgin (experienced) individuals of A. arbustorum discriminate between virgin and nonvirgin mating partners. We also assessed the number of sperm delivered to partners with different mating status. Neither virgin nor nonvirgin snails showed any preference for mating with a virgin partner. In all test situations mating was random and the number of sperm delivered was not adjusted to the mating status of the partner. Mating success was mainly determined by the activity of the individual. The random mating pattern does not imply random fertilization of eggs because the presence of a sperm-digesting organ and the morphology of the sperm storage organ allow a selective storage and use of sperm in A. arbustorum.  相似文献   

12.
Environmental effects on mating system expression are central to understanding mating system evolution in nature. Here, I report the results from a quantitative‐genetic experiment aimed at understanding the role of predation risk in the expression and evolution of life‐history and mating‐system traits in a hermaphroditic freshwater snail (Physa acuta). I reared 30 full‐sib families in four environments that factorially contrast predation risk and mate availability and measured age/size at first reproduction, growth rate, a morphological defense, and the early survival of outcrossed/selfed eggs that were laid under predator/no‐predator conditions. I evaluated the genetic basis of trade‐offs among traits and the stability of the G matrix across environments. Mating reduced growth while predation risk increased growth, but the effects of mating were weaker for predator‐induced snails and the effects of predation risk were weaker for snails without mates. Predation risk reduced the amount of time that individuals waited before self‐fertilizing and reduced inbreeding depression in the offspring. There was a positive among‐family relationship between the amount of time that individuals delayed selfing under predation risk and the magnitude of inbreeding depression. These results highlight several potential roles of enemies in mating‐system expression and evolution.  相似文献   

13.
Previous work suggests that low-spired hermaphroditic snails mate face-to-face and have reciprocal sperm exchange, whereas high-spired snails mate by shell mounting and have unilateral sperm exchange. This dichotomy lead others to speculate on the evolution of enigmatic mating behaviours and whole-body enantiomorphy. In the present study, we review the current literature on mating behaviour in pulmonate snails and show that: (1) several pulmonate species show considerable intraspecific variation in mating behaviour; (2) mating position does not predict reciprocity of penis intromission and sperm exchange; (3) dart-shooting may be correlated with reciprocity of sperm exchange but other factors must explain the gain or loss of darts; (4) it is unlikely that the degree of reciprocity is the most important factor in explaining the relationship of whole-body enantiomorphy and shell shape; and (5) the reciprocal intromission of penises does not necessarily involve the reciprocal transfer of sperm. Hence, our survey shows that current ideas on the evolutionary relationship between shell shape and reciprocity with sexual selection (including dart-use) and whole-body enantiomorphy in hermaphroditic snails should be refined. The results obtained demonstrate that our current knowledge on gastropod mating behaviour is too limited to detect general evolutionary trajectories in gastropod mating behaviour and genital anatomy.  © 2009 The Linnean Society of London, Biological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2009, 96 , 306–321.  相似文献   

14.
This paper examines the optimum conditions for edible snailsHelix aspersa to be cultured indoors successfully in successivegenerations (originating from the crossing of snails comingfrom different clutches of a previous generation), and the effectof crowding on growth and reproduction in fast-, medium-, andslow-growing snails coming from the same clutches. The timeneeded for the snails to reach marketable size (25–32mm)varied from 2.5 to 5 months up to the 7th generation. The timeneeded for the snails to mature and reproduce from 4 to 7 monthsuntil the fifth generation. After the F5 x F5 generation, thefinal size of the snails decreased. The number of eggs did notdiffer statistically among the different generations but thereproductive success (how many snails reproduced/cage) increasedfrom Fl = Fl generation onwards to F5 x F5. In F6 x F6 onlythree (out of 26) snails reproduced and in F7 x F7 none, althoughthe snails remained under controlled conditions for 15 moremonths. Mortality in the different generations varied from 0–10%up to F5 x F5 but from F6 x F6 onwards increased and reached25%. Concerning the origin of snails, it was found that largersnails (originating from Kyparissia, Peloponnesos) lay statisticallymore eggs (138.40 ± 29.60, N =5) than smaller ones (77.38± 40.42, N=4) (originating from Hania, island of Crete).Hatching success was greater, too. (Received 10 September 1996; accepted 24 March 1997)  相似文献   

15.
ABSTRACT

In two-choice discrimination experiments, females of Hyperolius marmoratus preferred the calls of lower frequency of the pair of stimuli. This preference was not shown in mating patterns observed in natural choruses, but is when females are phonotactically orienting in small choruses in an experimental enclosure. With an increase in chorus size, the mating pattern shifts from size-based, non-random (with some evidence of size-assortative) mating to random mating. This is the first time that frequency-based mate-choice by female anurans has been associated with chorus size, and hence with the sonic complexity of the acoustic environment.  相似文献   

16.
Female mate-choice copying is a social learning phenomenon whereby a female's observation of a successful sexual interaction between a male and another female increases her likelihood of subsequently preferring that male. Although mate-choice copying has been documented in several vertebrate species, to our knowledge it has not yet been investigated in insects. Here, we investigated whether female mate-choice copying occurs in the fruit fly Drosophila serrata, a model system for the study of mate preferences and the sexual selection they generate. We used two complementary experiments in which focal females were given a choice between two males that differed in either their apparent (as determined visually by the focal female) or actual recent mating success. Mate-choice copying was evaluated by testing whether focal females mated more frequently with the ‘preferred’ male as opposed to the other male. In both experiments, however, we found no evidence for mate-choice copying. We discuss possible reasons for the apparent absence of mate-choice copying in this species.  相似文献   

17.
Two series of experiments were conducted to examine the utilizationof exogenous sperm and their degree of depletion in three hermaphroditicsea hares, Aplysia kurodai Baba, 1937, A. Juliana Quoy &Gaunard, 1832, and A. parvula Guilding in MOrch, 1863. The firstseries of experiments was designed to determine whether onemating is enough for female partners to receive sufficient spermto fertilize at least one egg mass. For this purpose, isolatedindividuals were mated as females once with conspecific individualsand the viability of their subsequent eggs was examined. Whensuccessfully inseminated, individuals of all the three speciesreceived enough sperm to fertilize at least one egg mass, andthey continued to lay 3.6–8.5 viable egg masses. However,10–36% of the matings by these sea hares did not resultin any viable egg production by the female partner, indicatingthat these matings did not involve sperm transfer Such matingswithout sperm transfer tended to be shorter than matings withsuccessful sperm transfer The second experimental series wasconducted to examine whether sperm depletion actually occursor not in field-caught adults. For this purpose, adult individualscaught in the field were allowed to lay eggs under isolatedconditions without mating All the individuals of A. kurodaiand A. juliana stored enough sperm to fertilize at least oneegg mass. However, in A. parvula, 23–33% of individualslaid egg masses containing non-viable eggs at their first spawningafter isolation, indicating that these individuals were depletedin exogenous sperm (Received 17 July 1995; accepted 18 August 1995)  相似文献   

18.
Birds choose mates on the basis of colour, song and body size, but little is known about the mechanisms underlying these mating decisions. Reports that zebra finches prefer to view mates with the right eye during courtship, and that immediate early gene expression associated with courtship behaviour is lateralized in their left hemisphere suggest that visual mate choice itself may be lateralized. To test this hypothesis, we used the Gouldian finch, a polymorphic species in which individuals exhibit strong, adaptive visual preferences for mates of their own head colour. Black males were tested in a mate-choice apparatus under three eye conditions: left-monocular, right-monocular and binocular. We found that black male preference for black females is so strongly lateralized in the right-eye/left-hemisphere system that if the right eye is unavailable, males are unable to respond preferentially, not only to males and females of the same morph, but also to the strikingly dissimilar female morphs. Courtship singing is consistent with these lateralized mate preferences; more black males sing to black females when using their right eye than when using their left. Beauty, therefore, is in the right eye of the beholder for these songbirds, providing, to our knowledge, the first demonstration of visual mate choice lateralization.  相似文献   

19.
Populations of snails inhabiting areas with different historiesof Pb contamination differed in their deposition of Pb in shellrelative to soft tissues. Genetic variation, measured usingisozymes, was not related to Pb history nor geographic distancebetween populations. Shell characteristics were significantlydifferent among sites; shell dry weight was strongly relatedto soil calcium levels. Shells of snails from areas with longhistories of Pb contamination were significantly more robust(greater shell width/shell height ratio) than snails from otherlocations. H. asprsa adaptation to Pb contamination may involvesignificant changes in shell characteristics but these do notcorrelate with genetic traits assessed with allozymes (Received 29 December 1994; accepted 15 October 1995)  相似文献   

20.
The growth rates of ovotestis and individual accessory sexualorgans (ASO) of Biomphalaria glabrata snails were studied forcontrols and for immature and mature snails infected with Schistosomamansoni. The infection of immature B. glabrata strongly delaysgrowth of the ovotestis and inhibits the development of theaccessory sexual organs. There is no significant differenceup to 2 weeks post infection in the volume of the ovotestisand the ASO between mature infected B. glabrata and controlsnails. From 3 to 4 weeks post infection there was a reductionin the volume of the ovotestis and the ASO of infected matureB. glabrata; then growth of the ovotestis, albumen gland andfemale organs was stopped, but the effect of infection was lessconsistent for the male organs. For a parasite, immature andmature snails have to be considered as two different resourceenvironments, each having at infection time a particular patternof resource allocation, towards growth for juvenile and towardsreproduction for adult snails, changing the possible energyutilization patterns which can be used by the trematode. (Received 29 January 1993; accepted 22 April 1993)  相似文献   

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