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Dryad

Data from: Single and multiple mating reduces longevity of female dumpling squid (Euprymna tasmanica)

Cite this dataset

Franklin, Amanda M.; Stuart-Fox, Devi (2017). Data from: Single and multiple mating reduces longevity of female dumpling squid (Euprymna tasmanica) [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.65079

Abstract

For many species, mating is a necessary yet costly activity. The costs involved can have an important influence on the evolution of life histories and senescence. Females of many species mate multiply and this behaviour can inflict a longevity cost. Most studies investigating the effects of multiple mating on female survival have been conducted on insects and the effects in other taxa are largely unknown. We investigate the effects of both a single mating and a second mating on longevity in female dumpling squid (Euprymna tasmanica), a species in which both sexes mate multiply. Through comparing the longevity of virgin, once-mated and twice-mated females, we found that a single mating reduced female lifespan by 15 days on average. A second mating resulted in an additional 8 day (on average) longevity cost, despite no difference in total clutch mass, number of clutches, single egg mass or number of eggs per clutch between once-mated and twice-mated females. This demonstrates a cost to multiple mating which may be independent of the cost of egg production. Furthermore, total clutch mass and female lifespan were positively correlated, whilst female lifespan decreased with increasing average water temperature. The presence of an additive effect of reproduction on longevity suggests that multiple mating in cephalopods may have benefits that outweigh these costs, or that there is a conflict in optimal mating frequency between males and females.

Usage notes

Location

Port Phillip Bay
Australia