Abstract

A mismatch in synchrony between male and female gamete release in external fertilizers can result in reduced or failed fertilization, sperm competition, and reduced paternity. In Arctic charr (Salvelinus alpinus), males can adopt either a guard or sneak tactic resulting in both pre‐ and postcopulatory competition between males with alternative reproduction tactics. Here, spawning behavior of free‐living Arctic charr was video‐recorded, and their reproductive behavior was analyzed. From evaluating 157 spawning events, we observed that females mainly spawned with a guarding male and that the female and the guarding male synchronized timing of gamete release under sperm competition. Although sneakers spawned with higher synchrony than the guarding male in single‐male spawning events, the average sneaker released his milt less synchronized with the female than the guarding male under sperm competition. Approximately 50% of the recorded spawning events occurred under sperm competition, where each event included an average of 2.7 males. Additionally, sneakers were more exposed to sperm competition than guarding males. An influx of males, in close proximity to the female, occurred during the behavioral sequences leading up to egg release, but this influx seemed not dependent on egg release, suggesting that something else than gonadal product attracts sneaker males to the spawning female. Just before and during the actual release of gametes, the spawning couple vibrates their bodies in close contact and it seems likely that this vibrational communication between the spawning couple, which results in a larger amplitude sound wave than seen under regular courting, reveals time of gamete release to sneaker males. Thus, vibrational communication may enable synchrony between the guarding male and the female, and this might be traded against the cost of higher detectability from surrounding sneaker males, eavesdropping in close proximity.

Highlights

  • In a blink of an eye, hundreds of eggs and millions of sperm are released in open water when external fertilizers spawn

  • Fixed effects are presented with estimate parameters including standard error (St. error), 95% confidence intervals, and p-­values (p) (n = 146)

  • Females spawned more frequently when courted by the guarding males than when courted by the sneaker males

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Summary

Introduction

In a blink of an eye, hundreds of eggs and millions of sperm are released in open water when external fertilizers spawn. A mismatch between male and female gamete release can result in reduced or failed fertilization. Given sperm competition, the blocking of the micropyle by sperm from one male might result in reduced paternity for other males (Kobayashi & Yamamoto, 1981). The sneakers may try to fertilize the eggs by rushing into the spawning site and releasing their milt shortly after the guarding male and the female have spawned (Sigurjónsdóttir & Gunnarsson, 1989). The males’ spawning tactics seem to be highly plastic as they can shift between guarding and sneaker behavior depending on interacting males (Liljedal & Folstad, 2003; Rudolfsen, Figenschou, Folstad, Tveiten, & Figenschou, 2006)

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