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Male mating constraints affect mutual mate choice: prudent male courting and sperm-limited females.

Author

  • Roger Härdling
  • Thomas Gosden
  • Robin Aguilée

Summary, in English

Costs of sperm production may lead to prudence in male sperm allocation and also to male mate choice. Here, we develop a life history-based mutual mate choice model that takes into account the lost-opportunity costs for males from time out in sperm recovery and lets mate competition be determined by the prevailing mate choice strategies. We assume that high mating rate may potentially lead to sperm depletion in males, and that as a result, female reproduction may be limited by the availability of sperm. Increasing variation in male quality leads, in general, to increased selective mate choice by females, and vice versa. Lower-quality males may, however, gain access to more fecund higher-quality females by lowering their courting rate, thus increasing their sperm reserves. When faced with strong male competition for mates, low-quality males become less choosy, which leads to assortative mating for quality and an increased mating rate across all males. With assortative mating, the frequency of antagonistic interactions (sexual conflict) is reduced, allowing males to lower the time spent replenishing sperm reserves in order to increase mating rate. This in turn leads to lower sperm levels at mating and therefore could lead to negative effects on female fitness via sperm limitation.

Publishing year

2008

Language

English

Pages

259-271

Publication/Series

American Naturalist

Volume

172

Issue

2

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

University of Chicago Press

Topic

  • Biological Sciences

Keywords

  • sexual conflict
  • male-male competition
  • mating costs
  • sperm depletion
  • mutual mate choice

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0003-0147