Abstract
Many aspects of the reproduction and mating behaviour of earthworms remain poorly understood. In this study, we focused on body size as a possible trait that influences earthworm reproduction and mating processes. Eisenia andrei is a simultaneously hermaphroditic animal with reciprocal insemination and many hermaphrodites are expected to mate not primarily to get their own eggs fertilized, but rather to get the opportunity to fertilize the eggs of their partners. We investigated whether E. andrei has a size-dependent sex allocation, i.e. if larger earthworms are more biased toward female allocation and produce more egg mass and whether E. andrei has a size-related mate choice by studying the relationship between mating delay and cocoon production. To test this, we compared cocoon production between pairs of earthworms of equal and different size. Mature individuals of E. andrei were classified in two size classes (small and large) and we performed a two-factorial experiment with earthworm size and the size of the partner as factors. After copulation, earthworms were isolated and thereafter their mass and the number of cocoons they produced were recorded weekly for 18 weeks. We found no evidence of size-dependent sex allocation and we found no effect of size-assortative mating on cocoon production. With respect to the differences in the time to mate, the mating delay seems to indicate the existence of some kind of mate choice, independent of the earthworm size. Those earthworms that were matched sooner laid many cocoons, but those that waited a long time to mate laid fewer cocoons. This effect was stronger in those individuals paired with large partners, suggesting that some large partners are more desired ‘males’ than others; the reason for this remain as an open question. In general, our results confirm that earthworms are able to discriminate their partners and adjust their breeding effort accordingly.
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