Does female post-copulatory preference depend on pre-copulatory choice and post-mating environment?

Avatar
Poster
Voice is AI-generated
Connected to paperThis paper is a preprint and has not been certified by peer review

Does female post-copulatory preference depend on pre-copulatory choice and post-mating environment?

Authors

Sanghvi, K.; Todorova, B.; sepil, i.

Abstract

Sexual selection operates across pre- and post-copulatory episodes, driven by intra-sexual competition and inter-sexual choice for mates or gametes. In females, sexual selection often manifests as choosiness, however pre- and post-copulatory preferences can be in opposing directions. While relationships between male pre- and post-copulatory traits are well-studied, these relationships are less understood in females. Additionally, female post-copulatory environments can potentially influence post-copulatory choosiness, but this has been little investigated. Using Drosophila melanogaster, we explored whether mating latency, a proxy for inter-sexual pre-copulatory choosiness, correlates with female ejaculate ejection behaviour, a proxy for post-copulatory choosiness. We further tested whether the presence of a male in the female\'s post-copulatory environment influences her ejection behaviour. We found no significant effect of male presence. However, males with longer mating latencies experience a smaller proportion of their sperm ejected, suggesting that males preferred as mates may produce sperm less favoured for fertilization. This finding might possible trade-offs between male investment in courtship and ejaculates. Our study highlights that female-mediated sexual selection at pre- and post-copulatory stages can shape sexual traits in complex ways. This has implications for sexual conflict, possibly providing an explanation for the maintenance of variation in sexually selected traits.

Follow Us on

0 comments

Add comment