Turbellarian taxonomic database

Record # 23241
Author
Title
Journal
Kaufmann P, Schärer L (2020)
Is the initiation of selfing linked to a hermaphrodite's female or male reproductive function?
Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, Vol 74(4): 41

Abstract / Notes

"There is an ongoing debate about whether simultaneous hermaphrodites capable of selfing should prefer selfing
over outcrossing or vice versa. While many theoretical models predict a transmission advantage for alleles
that favour selfing, empirical studies often reveal low selfing rates. Despite these considerations, the
underlying mechanisms that determine reproductive strategies in simultaneously hermaphroditic animals are
poorly understood. In our study on the facultatively selfing free-living flatworm, Macrostomum hystrix, we ask
whether the initiation of selfing, as inferred from the differential spatial distribution of received sperm,
is linked to an individual's female or male reproductive function. Specifically, the initiation of selfing
could (i) be linked to the male function, when an individual is unable to donate sperm to others and hence
donates sperm to self, or it could (ii) be linked to the female function, when an individual fails to receive
sperm from others-and hence is unable to fertilize its eggs via outcrossing-thus inducing it to
self-fertilize. We experimentally created a social environment that allowed focals to outcross via sperm
donation, but simultaneously prevented them from receiving sperm-by pairing them with a partner lacking the
male copulatory organ-so that fertilization of the focal's eggs was restricted to selfing. Our results suggest
that such focals generally do not initiate selfing, while we readily observe selfing in isolated worms. This
suggests that in isolated M. hystrix, it is the male function that is linked to the initiation of selfing,
likely due to a lack of opportunities for sperm donation."

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