Abstract

We tested the hypothesis that high social status leads to high levels of copulatory behaviour and increased number of offspring in hamsters. When paired with albino female golden hamsters, males of three genotypic strains showed differences in the frequency and temporal patterning of some measures of copulatory behaviour but did not differ in general fertilization success. The results of two-male, one-female tests in which mating order and ejaculation frequencies were controlled indicated only relatively small differences in differential fertilizing capacity among these genotypes. Males of the genotypic strains displayed an equal probability of achieving alpha status in three-male, one-female competitive mating tests in which animals were habituated to semi-natural enclosures. Alpha males often slept in the female's nest box the night before she became receptive, were the first to mate on the following morning, achieved higher scores for all measures of sexual behaviour including ejaculation frequency and subsequently sired more young than did lower ranking males. However, the differential reproductive success of alpha males was not simply a function of higher ejaculation scores since they obtained more than twice as many young per ejaculation as subordinate males. Alpha males continued to copulate with long intromissions after exhausting their supply of ejaculates. Although females mated with several males, mating preferences were evidenced by their flank-gland and vaginal marking patterns on the day before receptivity and in their initial choice of mates during tethered male tests. The behaviour of alpha males is consistent with previous findings regarding the effects of mating order and prolonged copulation on sperm competition and suggests that sperm utilization patterns and mating tactics have coevolved.

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