• Open Access Science Articles
  • Science Sessions: The PNAS Podcast Program

Polyandrous females discriminate against previous mates

  1. David W. Zeh§
  1. *Department of Biology and Biochemistry, University of Houston, Houston, TX 77204-5513; and §Biology Department, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557
  1. Edited by Gordon H. Orians, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, and approved September 3, 1998 (received for review June 25, 1998)

Abstract

In most animal species, particularly those in which females engage in polyandry, mate choice is a sequential process in which a female must choose to mate or not to mate with each male encountered. Although a number of theoretical and empirical investigations have examined the effects of sequential mate choice on the operation of sexual selection, how females respond to solicitation by previous mates has received little attention. Here, we report the results of a study carried out on the polyandrous pseudoscorpion, Cordylochernes scorpioides, that assessed the sexual receptivity of once-mated females presented after a lapse of 1.5 hr or 48 hr with either their first mate or a different male. Females exhibited a high level of receptivity to new males, irrespective of intermating interval. By contrast, time between matings exerted a strong effect on female receptivity to previous mates. After a lapse of 48 hr, females did not differ significantly in their receptivity toward previous mates and different males, whereas at 1.5 hr after first mating, females were almost invariably unreceptive to males from whom they had previously accepted sperm. This result could not be attributed to male size or mating experience or to male sexual receptivity. Indeed, males were as willing to transfer sperm to a previous mate as they were to a new female. This difference between males and females in their propensity to remate with the same individual may reflect a conflict between the sexes, with males seeking to minimize postcopulatory sexual selection and females actively keeping open the opportunity for sperm competition and female choice of sperm by discriminating against previous mates.

Footnotes

    • Present address: Biology Department, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557.

    • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. e-mail: jaz{at}med.unr.edu.

    • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the Proceedings Office.

  • ABBREVIATIONS

    DM,
    different male;
    SM,
    same male;
    TCL,
    total chela length;
    HD,
    chela hand depth;
    TD,
    tibia depth;
    FD,
    femur depth;
    CL,
    cephalothorax length;
    CW,
    cephalothorax width;
    PC1PALP,
    pedipalp composite measure;
    PC1CEPH,
    composite cephalothorax measure
    • Received June 25, 1998.

    Online Impact