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Varying levels of female promiscuity in four <Emphasis Type="Italic">Apodemus</Emphasis> mice species
Authors:Josef Bryja  Hana Patzenhauerová  Tomá? Albrecht  Ladislav Mo?anský  Michal Stanko  Pavel Stopka
Institution:(1) Department of Population Biology, Institute of Vertebrate Biology, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, 67502 Studenec, Czech Republic;(2) Department of Botany and Zoology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk University, Kotlářská 2, 61137 Brno, Czech Republic;(3) Biodiversity Research Group, Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, 12844 Prague 2, Czech Republic;(4) Institute of Zoology, Slovak Academy of Sciences, 04002 Košice, Slovak Republic
Abstract:Sexual selection in most vertebrates is based on the evolution of fitness optimization strategies such as multiple-male mating (MMM). Several ecological correlates of MMM have been identified in bird and fish populations; however, only few studies have documented the effects of environmental change on promiscuity in mammals. In this study, the 127 pregnant females from four central European and ecologically diverse species of field mice (genus Apodemus) were studied to assess the role of ecological factors that may have shaped the evolution of particular mating systems. MMM was found in all analyzed species: in Apodemus uralensis and Apodemus flavicollis, up to two males could be identified as the fathers of a particular litter, while three males sired 9.1% of analyzed litters of Apodemus sylvaticus and 20.6% of Apodemus agrarius. Furthermore, there were obvious differences between species in relative testes size and the proportion of multiple sired litters during those seasons when the opportunity for multiple mating was high. The species with the smallest testes and the least promiscuous was A. uralensis (only 43.5% of multiple sired litters), while the species with the biggest testes and the most promiscuous was A. agrarius (69.2%). MMM was significantly associated with higher litter size in A. flavicollis, and the probability of MMM strongly increased with season in A. agrarius and with abundance in A. uralensis. These results indicate that ecological factors are associated with MMM rates in Apodemus field mice and more research is needed to fully understand the evolution of mating strategies at different levels of biological resolution.
Keywords:Mating systems  Multiple paternity  Wood mice  Testis size            Apodemus
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