Abstract

Food availability in the environment is often low and variable, constraining organisms in their resource allocation to different life‐history traits. For example, variation in food availability is likely to induce condition‐dependent investment in reproduction. Further, diet has been shown to affect ejaculate size, composition and quality. How these effects translate into male reproductive success or change male mating behavior is still largely unknown. Here, we concentrated on the effect of meal size on ejaculate production, male reproductive success and mating behavior in the common bedbug Cimex lectularius. We analyzed the production of sperm and seminal fluid within three different feeding regimes in six different populations. Males receiving large meals produced significantly more sperm and seminal fluid than males receiving small meals or no meals at all. While such condition‐dependent ejaculate production did not affect the number of offspring produced after a single mating, food‐restricted males could perform significantly fewer matings than fully fed males. Therefore, in a multiple mating context food‐restricted males paid a fitness cost and might have to adjust their mating strategy according to the ejaculate available to them. Our results indicate that meal size has no direct effect on ejaculate quality, but food availability forces a condition‐dependent mating rate on males. Environmental variation translating into variation in male reproductive traits reveals that natural selection can interact with sexual selection and shape reproductive traits. As males can modulate their ejaculate size depending on the mating situation, future studies are needed to elucidate whether environmental variation affecting the amount of ejaculate available might induce different mating strategies.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOrganisms need to eat to be able to grow, to maintain their everyday activity and to reproduce (Boggs 2009)

  • Food is an essential component in life

  • Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd

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Summary

Introduction

Organisms need to eat to be able to grow, to maintain their everyday activity and to reproduce (Boggs 2009). To optimize fitness, both the quantity and the composition of nutrients seem important for organisms (Lee et al 2008). The condition dependence of more primary reproductive traits in males, such as the production of ejaculate components, is less well understood. The consequences of condition-dependent ejaculate production on male fitness are largely unknown (Morehouse et al 2010).

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