1. Mate choice in the hermaphroditic land snail Succinea putris (Stylommatophora: Succineidae)
- Author
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Jordaens, Kurt, Pinceel, Jan, and Backeljau, Thierry
- Subjects
Evolutionary biology ,Zoology and wildlife conservation - Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anbehav.2004.10.021 Byline: Kurt Jordaens, Jan Pinceel, Thierry Backeljau Abstract: Internally fertilizing hermaphroditic animals show a bewildering variety of mating behaviours and mechanisms and many species have reciprocal sperm exchange. When matings are frequent and costly, partners are predicted to donate more sperm when they receive more sperm (i.e. conditional sperm exchange), but this has been shown experimentally only in sea slugs, free-living flatworms and possibly cestodes. We studied mate choice and sperm reciprocity patterns in the hermaphroditic land snail Succinea putris. Mate choice was random with respect to shell size. However, in matings where the partners were of unequal size, significantly more matings were observed where a small active individual mated on top of a larger inactive individual than the reverse. We suggest that this may be the result of mating on a vertical substrate or hanging underneath a horizontal substrate, because under these conditions it may be easier for a larger, inactive individual to carry a smaller, active one, than vice versa. The number of sperm transferred during mating was highly variable and was not related to the size of the donor, the size of the recipient, the size difference between the two partners or mating duration. Twelve of the 87 matings involved unilateral sperm exchange. There was no evidence for conditional sperm digestion. There was a significant, but weak positive relation between the numbers of sperm donated by the two partners. Hence, it remains unclear whether sperm exchange in S. putris is conditional or not. Author Affiliation: (*) Evolutionary Biology Group, Department of Biology, University of Antwerp, Belgium (a ) Malacology Section, Department of Invertebrates, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Belgium Article History: Received 23 April 2004; Revised 2 June 2004; Accepted 26 October 2004 Article Note: (miscellaneous) MS. number: 8100R
- Published
- 2005