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      Infertile matings and sperm competition: the effect of "nonsperm representation" on intraspecific variation in sperm precedence patterns.

      The American naturalist
      Animals, Breeding, Female, Infertility, Male, Insects, physiology, Male, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Spermatozoa

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          Abstract

          In theoretical and experimental approaches to the study of sperm competition, it is often assumed that ejaculates always contain enough sperm of good quality and that they are successfully transferred and used for fertilization. However, this view neglects the potential effects of infertility and sperm limitation. Permanent or temporal male infertility due to male sterility, insemination failures, or failures to fertilize the ova implies that some males do not achieve sperm representation in the female reproductive tract after mating. A review of the literature suggests that rates of nonsperm representation may be high; values for the proportion of infertile matings across 30 insect species vary between 0% and 63%, with the median being 22%. I simulated P2 (the proportion of offspring fathered by the second male to copulate with a female in a double-mating trial) distributions under a mechanism of random sperm mixing when sample sizes and rates of male infertility varied. The results show that nonsperm representation can be responsible for high intraspecific variance in sperm precedence patterns and that it can generate misleading interpretations about the mechanism of sperm competition. Nonsperm representation might be a common obstacle in the studies of sperm competition and postcopulatory female choice.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          15459878
          10.1086/423987

          Chemistry
          Animals,Breeding,Female,Infertility, Male,Insects,physiology,Male,Sexual Behavior, Animal,Spermatozoa
          Chemistry
          Animals, Breeding, Female, Infertility, Male, Insects, physiology, Male, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Spermatozoa

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