Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals

Male reproductive traits such as ejaculate size and quality, are expected to decline with advancing age due to senescence. It is however unclear whether this expectation is upheld across taxa. We perform a meta-analysis on 379 studies, to quantify the effects of advancing male age on ejaculate trait...

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Main Authors: Sanghvi, K, Vega-Trejo, R, Nakagawa, S, Gascoigne, SJL, Johnson, SL, Salguero-Gómez, R, Pizzari, T, Sepil, I
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2024
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author Sanghvi, K
Vega-Trejo, R
Nakagawa, S
Gascoigne, SJL
Johnson, SL
Salguero-Gómez, R
Pizzari, T
Sepil, I
author_facet Sanghvi, K
Vega-Trejo, R
Nakagawa, S
Gascoigne, SJL
Johnson, SL
Salguero-Gómez, R
Pizzari, T
Sepil, I
author_sort Sanghvi, K
collection OXFORD
description Male reproductive traits such as ejaculate size and quality, are expected to decline with advancing age due to senescence. It is however unclear whether this expectation is upheld across taxa. We perform a meta-analysis on 379 studies, to quantify the effects of advancing male age on ejaculate traits across 157 species of non-human animals. Contrary to predictions, we find no consistent pattern of age-dependent changes in ejaculate traits. This result partly reflects methodological limitations, such as studies sampling a low proportion of adult lifespan, or the inability of meta-analytical approaches to document non-linear ageing trajectories of ejaculate traits; which could potentially lead to an underestimation of senescence. Yet, we find taxon-specific differences in patterns of ejaculate senescence. For instance, older males produce less motile and slower sperm in ray-finned fishes, but larger ejaculates in insects, compared to younger males. Notably, lab rodents show senescence in most ejaculate traits measured. Our study challenges the notion of universal reproductive senescence, highlighting the need for controlled methodologies and a more nuanced understanding of reproductive senescence, cognisant of taxon-specific biology, experimental design, selection pressures, and life-history.
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spelling oxford-uuid:1839fbc5-891a-41ed-b516-b1158877dcda2024-01-19T13:33:32ZMeta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animalsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:1839fbc5-891a-41ed-b516-b1158877dcdaEnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer Nature2024Sanghvi, KVega-Trejo, RNakagawa, SGascoigne, SJLJohnson, SLSalguero-Gómez, RPizzari, TSepil, IMale reproductive traits such as ejaculate size and quality, are expected to decline with advancing age due to senescence. It is however unclear whether this expectation is upheld across taxa. We perform a meta-analysis on 379 studies, to quantify the effects of advancing male age on ejaculate traits across 157 species of non-human animals. Contrary to predictions, we find no consistent pattern of age-dependent changes in ejaculate traits. This result partly reflects methodological limitations, such as studies sampling a low proportion of adult lifespan, or the inability of meta-analytical approaches to document non-linear ageing trajectories of ejaculate traits; which could potentially lead to an underestimation of senescence. Yet, we find taxon-specific differences in patterns of ejaculate senescence. For instance, older males produce less motile and slower sperm in ray-finned fishes, but larger ejaculates in insects, compared to younger males. Notably, lab rodents show senescence in most ejaculate traits measured. Our study challenges the notion of universal reproductive senescence, highlighting the need for controlled methodologies and a more nuanced understanding of reproductive senescence, cognisant of taxon-specific biology, experimental design, selection pressures, and life-history.
spellingShingle Sanghvi, K
Vega-Trejo, R
Nakagawa, S
Gascoigne, SJL
Johnson, SL
Salguero-Gómez, R
Pizzari, T
Sepil, I
Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title_full Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title_fullStr Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title_full_unstemmed Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title_short Meta-analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
title_sort meta analysis shows no consistent evidence for senescence in ejaculate traits across animals
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