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Sperm speed is associated with sex bias of siblings in a human population
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作者 Jim A Mossman Jon Slate +2 位作者 Tim R Birkhead Harry D Moore Allan A Pacey 《Asian Journal of Andrology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2013年第1期152-154,共3页
Recent studies investigating possible causes of male subfertility have largely focused on how lifestyle or environmental factors impact on the process of spermatogenesis, Markedly, fewer studies have investigated thos... Recent studies investigating possible causes of male subfertility have largely focused on how lifestyle or environmental factors impact on the process of spermatogenesis, Markedly, fewer studies have investigated those risk factors that result in reduced sperm quality, such as poor sperm motility. The speed at which sperm swim is a major predictor of fertility and is extremely variable in human populations. It has been hypothesized that offspring sex may be adaptively manipulated to maximize the offspring's reproductive fitness (e.g., parents with genes for good male fertility traits, such as high sperm speed, would produce primarily sons and fewer daughters because the offspring will inherit advantageous male fertility genes). Conversely, parents with poor male fertility genes would produce primarily daughters, We tested whether there was an association between how fast a man's sperm swam and the sex bias of his siblings in a sample of men attending clinic for fertility investigations with their partner and with a wide range of semen characteristics, including sperm speed. We found that the sex bias of a man's siblings is associated with his sperm speed; men with female-biased siblings had significantly slower sperm (judged using computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA)) than men from male-biased sibships. This observation suggests family composition is an important factor that needs to be considered in future eDidemiological and clinical studies of human fertility, 展开更多
关键词 computer-assisted sperm analysis (CASA) FERTILITY intralocus sexual conflict MALE OFFSPRING sex ratio sexual antagonism
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Male-like testosterone levels inhibit oviposition in a female parrot: A breeding experiment in budgerigars
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作者 Stefanie E. R LAHAYE Marcel EENS +1 位作者 Veerle M. DARRAS Rianne PINXTEN 《Current Zoology》 SCIE CAS CSCD 2015年第4期586-595,共10页
Studies in several songbird species have shown that treating females with the androgenic steroid hormone testoste- rone (T) can negatively affect female reproductive behaviors and breeding success. As the effects of... Studies in several songbird species have shown that treating females with the androgenic steroid hormone testoste- rone (T) can negatively affect female reproductive behaviors and breeding success. As the effects of T on females appear to be species-specific, it is not clear if similar effects of high T occur in non-songbird species. Here, we studied the effects of T supplementation on female reproductive behavior and oviposition in the budgerigar, Melopsittacus undulatus, a small monogamous parrot species with distinct sex differences in parental behavior. We experimentally increased T concentrations to male-like levels in T-treated females compared to controls and we allowed females to breed. We found no significant effects of treatment on the latency to enter the nestbox but T treatment significantly interfered with oviposition. Our results show that T-treated females were seven times less likely to produce a clutch than control females. As we found that T treatment had a strong inhibitory effect on oviposition, our results indicate that female budgerigars suffer fitness costs from male-like plasma T levels. Therefore, it may be possible that, also in non-songbird species, selection for higher T levels in males is constrained by a correlated response to selection which imposes fitness costs on females in terms of reproduction. Evaluating whether or not this is indeed the case requires further work combining different approaches to the study of the evolution of male and female testosterone levels [Current Zoology 61 (4): 586-595, 2015]. 展开更多
关键词 Female testosterone Reproductive behavior Melopsittacus undulatus Breeding success intralocus sexual conflict Antagonistic selection
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