Abstract

Sexual selection is generally predicted to act more strongly on males than on females. The Darwin-Bateman paradigm predicts that this should also hold for hermaphrodites. However, measuring this strength of selection is less straightforward when both sexual functions are performed throughout the organism's lifetime. Besides, quantifications of sexual selection are usually done during a short time window, while many animals store sperm and are long-lived. To explore whether the chosen time frame affects estimated measures of sexual selection, we recorded mating success and reproductive success over time, using a simultaneous hermaphrodite. Our results show that male sexual selection gradients are consistently positive. However, an individual's female mating success seems to negatively affect its own male reproductive success, an effect that only becomes visible several weeks into the experiment, highlighting that the time frame is crucial for the quantification and interpretation of sexual selection measures, an insight that applies to any iteroparous mating system.

Highlights

  • Darwin defined sexual selection as selection on traits that affect mating success (Darwin, 1871)

  • The study that we present here is the first to look in detail at the effect of repeated mating on reproductive success over time in a simultaneous hermaphrodite

  • By using a simultaneous hermaphrodite, we could answer several unresolved questions that are relevant for the understanding of sexual selection in general

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Summary

Introduction

Darwin defined sexual selection as selection on traits that affect mating success (Darwin, 1871). Classical examples include antlers of deer, long and extravagantly coloured (tail) feathers in birds and traits of that ilk. In recent decades, this definition has been refined, most notable due to the realisation that sexual selection does act prior to mating – referred to as precopulatory sexual selection (Darwin’s focus) - and after mating - post-copulatory sexual selection (e.g., Parker, 1970; Eberhard, 1996). The residual variation of the relationship between mating success and reproductive success can be used as a quantitative proxy for post-copulatory sexual selection These sexual selection processes are often measured, but with a strong bias towards species with separate sexes, even though simultaneous hermaphrodites are under influence of the same selective pressures (Charnov, 1979; Nakadera and Koene, 2013; Pelissieet al., 2012; Scharer and Pen, 2013)

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