Colorful male guppies do not provide females with fecundity benefits |
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Authors: | Pilastro, Andrea Gasparini, Clelia Boschetto, Chiara Evans, Jonathan P. |
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Affiliation: | a Dipartimento di Biologia, Università di Padova, via Ugo Bassi 58/B, 35131 Padova, Italy b Centre for Evolutionary Biology, School of Animal Biology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands 6009 WA, Australia |
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Abstract: | The phenotype-linked fertility hypothesis (PLFH) predicts thatmales with elaborated sexual ornaments signal their high fertilizingefficiency to females and that female preferences for ornamentedmales are driven by direct fecundity benefits. Although somestudies have demonstrated that attractive males produce moreor higher quality sperm, there is limited experimental evidencethat females derive fecundity benefits by mating with attractivemales. Some of the best indirect evidence for the PLFH comesfrom work on guppies (Poecilia reticulata), an internally fertilizingspecies of freshwater fish in which phenotypically attractivemales produce larger and relatively higher quality ejaculatesthan their less attractive counterparts. We used artificialinsemination to impregnate female guppies using known numbersof sperm from a range of males with different phenotypes andrelated female fecundity (brood success, time from inseminationto parturition, and brood size) to sperm numbers and male phenotype(body size and the relative area of color spots). We found noevidence that male phenotype or experimentally adjusted "ejaculate"size influenced any of our measures of female fecundity. Theseresults highlight the importance of experimentally investigatingpotential fecundity benefits associated with female mating preferencesbefore concluding that the maintenance of these preferencesis driven by the pursuit of such benefits. |
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Keywords: | artificial insemination direct benefits fecundity female choice male sexual secondary characters sperm number. |
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