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Females benefit from mating with different males in the scorpionfly Panorpa cognata
Authors:Engqvist  Leif
Institution:Institut für Evolutionsbiologie und Ökologie, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, An der Immenburg 1, D-53121 Bonn, Germany
Abstract:The adaptive significance of female polyandry has become a recurrentsubject of recent theoretical and empirical research. It hasbeen argued that in addition to direct benefits, such as nuptialgifts or an adequate sperm supply, females may gain geneticbenefits from mating with different males. Females of the scorpionflyPanorpa cognata mate with several males during their lifetime.In an experiment designed to rule out any direct nutritionalbenefit of multiple matings, I found that polyandrous femalesthat mated with two different males achieved a significantlyhigher egg-hatching success than monandrous females that matedtwice with the same male. However, individual males did nottrigger the same response in different females as the egg-hatchingsuccess of different females that mated with one and same maledid not correlate. The results, thus, do not conform to predictionsfrom hypotheses assuming that genetic benefits of polyandryare influenced by the intrinsic genetic quality of males. Theresults are, however, consistent with the genetic incompatibilityhypothesis. Nevertheless, substances from different males transferredduring copulation may synergistically affect zygote viability.Furthermore, I discuss why paternity studies can only explicitlytest the genetic incompatibility hypothesis if there are a prioriexpectations of female-male genome compatibilities.
Keywords:egg-hatching success  genetic incompatibility  Mecoptera  polyandry  sperm limitation  
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