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Postcopulatory sexual selection is associated with accelerated evolution of sperm morphology
Authors:Melissah Rowe  Tomáš Albrecht  Emily R. A. Cramer  Arild Johnsen  Terje Laskemoen  Jason T. Weir  Jan T. Lifjeld
Affiliation:1. Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Blindern, Oslo, Norway;2. Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis, Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, Blindern, Oslo, Norway;3. Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Brno, Czech Republic;4. Faculty of Sciences, Charles University in Prague, Praha, Czech Republic;5. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Rapid diversification of sexual traits is frequently attributed to sexual selection, though explicit tests of this hypothesis remain limited. Spermatozoa exhibit remarkable variability in size and shape, and studies report a correlation between sperm morphology (sperm length and shape) and sperm competition risk or female reproductive tract morphology. However, whether postcopulatory processes (e.g., sperm competition and cryptic female choice) influence the speed of evolutionary diversification in sperm form is unknown. Using passerine birds, we quantified evolutionary rates of sperm length divergence among lineages (i.e., species pairs) and determined whether these rates varied with the level of sperm competition (estimated as relative testes mass). We found that relative testes mass was significantly and positively associated with more rapid phenotypic divergence in sperm midpiece and flagellum lengths, as well as total sperm length. In contrast, there was no association between relative testes mass and rates of evolutionary divergence in sperm head size, and models suggested that head length is evolutionarily constrained. Our results are the first to show an association between the strength of sperm competition and the speed of sperm evolution, and suggest that postcopulatory sexual selection promotes rapid evolutionary diversification of sperm morphology.
Keywords:Birds  evolutionary diversification  evolutionary rate  passerine  sperm competition
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