DETERMINANTS OF PATERNITY IN A BUTTERFLY

Authors
Citation
N. Wedell et Pa. Cook, DETERMINANTS OF PATERNITY IN A BUTTERFLY, Proceedings - Royal Society. Biological Sciences, 265(1396), 1998, pp. 625-630
Citations number
42
Categorie Soggetti
Biology
ISSN journal
09628452
Volume
265
Issue
1396
Year of publication
1998
Pages
625 - 630
Database
ISI
SICI code
0962-8452(1998)265:1396<625:DOPIAB>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Success in sperm competition is of fundamental importance to males, ye t little is known about what factors determine paternity. Theory predi cts that males producing high sperm numbers have an advantage in sperm competition. Large spermatophore size (the sperm containing package) also correlates with paternity in some species, but the relative impor tance of spermatophore size and sperm numbers has remained unexplored. Males of the small white butterfly, Pieris rapae (Lepidoptera: Pierid ae), produce large nutritious spermatophores on their first mating. On their second mating, spermatophores are only about half the size of t he first, but with almost twice the sperm number. We manipulated male mating history to examine the effect of spermatophore size and sperm n umbers on male fertilization success. Overall, paternity shows either first male or, more frequently, second male sperm precedence. Previous ly mated males have significantly higher fertilization success in comp etition with males mating for the first time, strongly suggesting that high sperm number is advantageous in sperm competition. Male size als o affects paternity with relatively larger males having higher fertili zation success. This may indicate that spermatophore size influences p aternity, because in virgin males spermatophore size correlates with m ale size. The paternity of an individual male is also inversely correl ated with the mass of his spermatophore remains dissected out of the f emale. This suggests that females may influence paternity by affecting the rate of spermatophore drainage. Although the possibility of femal e postcopulatory choice remains to be explored, these results clearly show that males maximize their fertilization success by increasing the number of sperm in their second mating.