Abstract

Abstract The allometric relationship between body mass and testis mass was calculated using data from 16 genera (37 species) of African and Japanese frogs. Having controlled for body mass, the relative testis mass of Chiromantis xerampelina, Rhacophorus arboreus and R. schlegelli was considerably heavier than predicted (3.8-14.6 times more). All three species have multi-male breeding. Although the result is consistent with sperm competition having selected for increased sperm production in anurans, the phylogenetic distribution of well documented multi-male spawning is confined to the Rhacophoridae. Thus, multi-male mating may have arisen only once effectively reducing the analysis to two data points. However, in the four foam-nesting Rhacophorids whose breeding behaviour has been studied there is also a correlation between relative testis mass and the intensity of sperm competition. This suggests that even within the Rhacophoridae, sperm competition leads to larger testes. Direct evidence for sperm competition in C. xerampelina is provided by a 'sterile male' experiment, which shows that peripheral males are capable of fertilizing eggs.

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