Skip to main content
Dryad

Data from: Extreme fertilisation bias towards freshly inseminated sperm in a species exhibiting prolonged female sperm storage

Cite this dataset

Gasparini, Clelia; Daymond, Emma; Evans, Jonathan P. (2018). Data from: Extreme fertilisation bias towards freshly inseminated sperm in a species exhibiting prolonged female sperm storage [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.7v1hq

Abstract

The storage of sperm by females across successive reproductive cycles is well documented in internal fertilisers, yet the fate of stored sperm when they compete with ‘new’ sperm to fertilise a female’s eggs has rarely been considered. This gap in our understanding is likely due to the logistical difficulties of controlling behavioural interactions during or after mating, which in turn may influence how many sperm are inseminated and how stored sperm are ultimately utilised during successive bouts of sperm competition with freshly inseminated sperm. Here, we use artificial insemination (AI) in guppies (Poecilia reticulata), a polyandrous livebearing poeciliid fish exhibiting prolonged sperm storage by females, to overcome these challenges. The use of AI enables us to control potential differential maternal effects (e.g. behaviourally mediated cryptic female choice) and specifically test for post-copulatory paternity biases that favour either stored or fresh sperm when they compete to fertilise eggs. Our paternity analyses revealed the almost complete dominance of freshly inseminated sperm over stored sperm, supporting previous studies reporting similar patterns following natural matings across successive brood cycles. However, our use artificial inseminations, which excluded behavioural interactions between males and females, most likely generated a far stronger pattern of fresh sperm precedence compared to those reported in previous studies, possibly implicating ‘cryptic’ forms of selection by females that may sometimes bolster the success of stored sperm.

Usage notes