Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.

Male fertility has seldom been studied in natural populations because it has been assumed that strong selection would result in uniformly high values among males, and therefore mating success has been equated with fertilisation success. In contrast, male fertility has received much attention in stud...

Mô tả đầy đủ

Chi tiết về thư mục
Những tác giả chính: Gomendio, M, Malo, A, Garde, J, Roldan, E
Định dạng: Journal article
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: 2007
_version_ 1826299233507999744
author Gomendio, M
Malo, A
Garde, J
Roldan, E
author_facet Gomendio, M
Malo, A
Garde, J
Roldan, E
author_sort Gomendio, M
collection OXFORD
description Male fertility has seldom been studied in natural populations because it has been assumed that strong selection would result in uniformly high values among males, and therefore mating success has been equated with fertilisation success. In contrast, male fertility has received much attention in studies of domestic livestock, where economic benefits rely on improving productivity, and in human infertility studies, where the efficiency of treatments depends on understanding which ejaculate traits explain reproductive failures and predict success at assisted conception. Despite years of efforts, no conclusive results have been obtained, probably because such studies have focused on opposite extremes of the range with little variation: domestic livestock have often been subject to strong artificial selection for high fertility, and human patients requiring treatment have compromised fertility. Recent findings from natural populations of red deer have shown that males differ markedly in their fertility, and have revealed the degree of variation found in different semen traits, both between and within males. Fertility trials have shown that male fertility is determined mainly by sperm swimming speed and the proportion of normal sperm, when sperm numbers are kept constant. Sperm design exerts a strong influence on sperm swimming speed, with faster swimming sperm having elongated heads, shorter midpieces and a longer principal plus terminal pieces in relation to total flagellum length. Thus, the large inter-male variation in sperm design found among natural populations underlies differences in sperm swimming speed which, in turn, determine differences in male fertility rates. Secondary sexual characters are honest indicators of male fertility, so males with large and elaborated antlers have larger testes and faster swimming sperm. Testosterone does not seem to mediate the relationship between antler size and semen quality, since it is associated with sperm production, but not with sperm quality or antler size. Finally, more fertile males produce a greater proportion of sons, who will inherit the semen traits which will enhance their fertility.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T04:58:48Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:d7892eb4-56d9-4c63-9240-fc4c65d33266
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T04:58:48Z
publishDate 2007
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:d7892eb4-56d9-4c63-9240-fc4c65d332662022-03-27T08:41:52ZSperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d7892eb4-56d9-4c63-9240-fc4c65d33266EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2007Gomendio, MMalo, AGarde, JRoldan, EMale fertility has seldom been studied in natural populations because it has been assumed that strong selection would result in uniformly high values among males, and therefore mating success has been equated with fertilisation success. In contrast, male fertility has received much attention in studies of domestic livestock, where economic benefits rely on improving productivity, and in human infertility studies, where the efficiency of treatments depends on understanding which ejaculate traits explain reproductive failures and predict success at assisted conception. Despite years of efforts, no conclusive results have been obtained, probably because such studies have focused on opposite extremes of the range with little variation: domestic livestock have often been subject to strong artificial selection for high fertility, and human patients requiring treatment have compromised fertility. Recent findings from natural populations of red deer have shown that males differ markedly in their fertility, and have revealed the degree of variation found in different semen traits, both between and within males. Fertility trials have shown that male fertility is determined mainly by sperm swimming speed and the proportion of normal sperm, when sperm numbers are kept constant. Sperm design exerts a strong influence on sperm swimming speed, with faster swimming sperm having elongated heads, shorter midpieces and a longer principal plus terminal pieces in relation to total flagellum length. Thus, the large inter-male variation in sperm design found among natural populations underlies differences in sperm swimming speed which, in turn, determine differences in male fertility rates. Secondary sexual characters are honest indicators of male fertility, so males with large and elaborated antlers have larger testes and faster swimming sperm. Testosterone does not seem to mediate the relationship between antler size and semen quality, since it is associated with sperm production, but not with sperm quality or antler size. Finally, more fertile males produce a greater proportion of sons, who will inherit the semen traits which will enhance their fertility.
spellingShingle Gomendio, M
Malo, A
Garde, J
Roldan, E
Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title_full Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title_fullStr Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title_full_unstemmed Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title_short Sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations.
title_sort sperm traits and male fertility in natural populations
work_keys_str_mv AT gomendiom spermtraitsandmalefertilityinnaturalpopulations
AT maloa spermtraitsandmalefertilityinnaturalpopulations
AT gardej spermtraitsandmalefertilityinnaturalpopulations
AT roldane spermtraitsandmalefertilityinnaturalpopulations