OPERATIONAL SEX-RATIOS AND SPERM LIMITATION IN POPULATIONS OF DROSOPHILA-PACHEA

Authors
Citation
S. Pitnick, OPERATIONAL SEX-RATIOS AND SPERM LIMITATION IN POPULATIONS OF DROSOPHILA-PACHEA, Behavioral ecology and sociobiology, 33(6), 1993, pp. 383-391
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Zoology,"Behavioral Sciences
ISSN journal
03405443
Volume
33
Issue
6
Year of publication
1993
Pages
383 - 391
Database
ISI
SICI code
0340-5443(1993)33:6<383:OSASLI>2.0.ZU;2-H
Abstract
Males of the cactophilic fruitfly, Drosophila pachea, produce relative ly few but very large sperm, and partition their limited gamete number s among successive mates. The present study found that males take 10 d ays longer than females, post-eclosion, to become sexually mature. The pattern of testes development suggests that the need to produce teste s long enough to manufacture the giant sperm is the cause of the delay ed male maturity. These findings generate the prediction that the oper ational sex ratio (OSR) of populations will be female-biased. The size , sex ratio, and OSR of natural populations were examined. In general, local populations tended to be small and sex ratios tended to be slig htly male-biased. However, as predicted, the OSR of populations, at le ast in one season, tended to be female-biased, with an average of 2.3 receptive females for each sexually active male. Results of laboratory experiments to determine the relationship between female remating fre quency and fitness, and between population OSR and productivity, sugge st that natural populations with female-biased OSRs are sperm-limited. The origin and maintenance of sperm gigantism and the unusual sperm-p artitioning behavior of males are discussed with respect to population structure.