Abstract

Guard-sneaker tactics are widespread among fish, where territorial males defend a nest and provide parental care while sneakers try to steal fertilizations. Territorials and sneakers adopt diverse pre- and post-mating strategies, adjusting their ejaculate investment and/or behavioural responses to the presence of competitors. The relative distance of competitors from the spawning female plays a major role in influencing male mating strategies and the resulting paternity share. However, territorial male quality and sneaking intensity do not fully account for the variability in the relative siring success occurring among species. An often neglected factor potentially affecting sneakers proximity to females is the nest structure. We conducted a field experiment using the black goby, whose nests show two openings of different size. We found that territorial males defend more and sneaking pressure is higher at the front, larger access of the nest than at the back, smaller one. Moreover, microsatellite paternity analysis shows that territorials sire more offspring at the back of their nest. Such a predictable spatial distribution of the paternity share suggests that nest structure might work as an indirect cue of male relative siring success, potentially influencing the territorial male investment in parental care and/or the female egg deposition strategy.

Highlights

  • Guard-sneaker tactics are widespread among fish, where territorial males defend a nest and provide parental care while sneakers try to steal fertilizations

  • Intrasexual competition may lead to the evolution of alternative reproductive tactics (ARTs) in either sex, with male and/or female phenotypes varying in behaviour, morphology, physiology and life history traits within the same ­population[1,2]

  • The only study investigating the spatial distribution of paternity success has been conducted in a few nests of the lingcod, Ophiodon elongatus, and it was found that territorial males sired more offspring in the deep and less accessible part of the n­ est[27]

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Summary

Introduction

Guard-sneaker tactics are widespread among fish, where territorial males defend a nest and provide parental care while sneakers try to steal fertilizations. Microsatellite paternity analysis shows that territorials sire more offspring at the back of their nest Such a predictable spatial distribution of the paternity share suggests that nest structure might work as an indirect cue of male relative siring success, potentially influencing the territorial male investment in parental care and/or the female egg deposition strategy. Considering that while performing parental care territorial males fan the eggs to increase the oxygen supply, the small back opening presumably enhances the otherwise poor water circulation inside the nest, favouring its ­ventilation[38] In this species the ejaculates of different male phenotypes achieve the same fertilization success when simultaneously released at the same distance from unfertilized ­eggs[37]. We quantified (1) the behaviour of territorial and sneaker males, and (2) the distribution of the paternity success along the nest using molecular analysis on embryos sampled from artificial nests placed in the field

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