(a) Parental investment
- Comparison of sperm and egg production in relation to number and energy store:
| |
Egg
|
Sperm
|
|
Number
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Low
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High
|
|
Energy store
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High
|
Minimal to get to egg
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|
Parental Investment
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Greater in females
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Less in males
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- Greater investment by females due to:
- Female investment in the egg structure in non-mammals or in the uterus and during gestation in mammals.
- Parental investment is costly but increases the probability of production and survival of young
- Classification of r-selected (r-strategists) and K-selected (K-strategists) organisms based on level of parental investment in offspring and number of offspring produced
- Characteristics of r-selected species: smaller; have a shorter generation time; mature more rapidly; reproduce earlier in their lifetime, often only once; produce a larger number of smaller offspring, each of which receives only a smaller energy input; limited parental care; most offspring will not reach adulthood.
- Characteristics of K-selected species: larger and live longer; mature more slowly; can reproduce many times in their lifetime; produce relatively few, larger offspring; high level of parental care; many offspring have a high probability of surviving to adulthood.
- r-selection tends to occur in unstable environments where the species has not reached its reproductive capacity, whereas K-selection tends to occur in stable environments
Comparison of costs and benefits of external and internal fertilisation
External fertilisation
- benefits: very large numbers of offspring can be produced
- costs: many gametes predated or not fertilised; no or limited parental care; few offspring survive
Internal fertilisation
- benefits: increased chance of successful fertilisation; fewer eggs needed; offspring can be retained internally for protection and/or development; higher offspring survival rate
- costs: a mate must be located, which requires energy expenditure; requires direct transfer of gametes from one partner to another
(b) Reproductive behaviours and mating systems in animals
- Mating systems are based on how many mates an individual has during one breeding season
- These range from polygamy (polygyny and polyandry) to monogamy
- Monogamy: the mating of a pair of animals to the exclusion of all others.
- Polygamy: individuals of one sex have more than one mate.
- Polygyny: one male mates exclusively with a group of females.
- Polyandry: one female mates with a number of males in the same breeding season.
Courtship
- Many animals have mate-selection courtship rituals
- Successful courtship behaviour in birds and fish can be a result of species-specific sign stimuli (usually the presence of a female) and fixed action pattern responses (often a ritual, such as a song or dance)
- Sexual selection selects for characteristics that have little survival benefit for the individual, but increase their chances of mating
- Many species exhibit sexual dimorphism as a product of sexual selection
- Females are generally inconspicuous; males usually have more conspicuous markings, structures and behaviours.
- Reversed sexual dimorphism occurs in some species
- Female choice involves females assessing honest signals of the fitness of males
- Honest signals can indicate favourable alleles that increase the chances of survival of offspring (fitness) or a low parasite burden suggesting a healthy individual.
- In lekking species, males gather to display at a lek, where female choice occurs
- Some bird species exhibit lekking behaviour.
- Dominant males occupy the centre of the lek, with subordinates and juveniles at the fringes as ‘satellite’ males.
- During the display, female choice occurs.
- Success in male-male rivalry through conflict (real or ritualised), increases access to females for mating
- Males will fight for dominance and access to females, often using elaborate ‘weapons’ such as antlers, tusks, horns.
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