4.4 Article

An advantage for young sperm in the house cricket Acheta domesticus

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 165, Issue 6, Pages 718-723

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/430010

Keywords

cost of sperm production; intraspecific variation; sexual selection; sperm age

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We show that males of the house cricket Acheta domesticus regularly expel sperm packages (spermatophores) independently of copulation and at a rate that is not affected by the presence of females. We then show for the first time that the age of sperm affects their likelihood of being stored by females after copulation; younger sperm were overrepresented in the female sperm storage organ and therefore in the sperm population used for fertilization. Our results suggest that the reproductive success of males may increase if they deliver ejaculates with young sperm, and the results may explain why the males of several species are regularly observed to discard ejaculates. Our results also suggest that phenomena such as female multiple mating, paternity bias, and/or exaggerated ejaculate sizes may be related to the advantage both genders gain by using young sperm.

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