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Copulatory plug displacement and prolonged copulation in the Iberian rock lizard (Lacerta monticola)
Male Iberian rock lizards (Lacerta monticola) produce copulatory plugs that adhere firmly inside the female cloaca and occlude both oviducts. These plugs do not prevent rival male insemination, as they neither reduce female attractiveness or receptivity to rival males nor do they function as chastity belts. Prior to copulation, males bite various regions of the female body, including the cloacal region. A previous plug in the female cloaca is expelled only after rival male intromission. We hypothesized that: (1) such male pre-copulatory behaviours function to loosen plug adherence to the female cloaca, thereby facilitating intromission, and that (2) the hemipenis plays a role in displacing a previous plug prior to the delivery of a new plug. Neither of these hypotheses was supported. Instead, our results indicate that rival males can intromit the hemipenis past a previous plug in the female cloaca and deliver their own plug underneath it. Consequently, previous plugs are pushed away from the oviductal openings and even dislodged from the female cloaca. Copulation duration was determined both by the time used by males to deliver a plug and by the fact that males prolonged copulation beyond plug delivery. There seemed to be sexual conflict over prolonged copulation, which was resolved by the male/female head-length ratio. The adaptive value of Iberian rock lizard copulatory plugs and prolonged copulation in Iberian rock lizards is discussed in the context of sperm competition.Communicated by S. Downes 相似文献
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The reduced lower temporal arcade of the skull and the movable quadrate are the most distinctive features of squamates. Up
to now, no exception has been documented for any fossil or extant squamates. We report here a new fossil lizard that possesses
a complete lower temporal arcade and an unmovable quadrate. The anatomical relationships indicate that those two modifications
were secondarily obtained in the new lizard. The complete lower temporal bar and the firm contact between the pterygoid and
quadrate may have served as a brace to support the quadrate jaw articulation and thus prevent it from twisting anteriorly
rather than posteriorly during the bite cycles. This represents an entirely new pattern of jaw muscle functions within the
Squamata. 相似文献
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