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Sexual promiscuity, cryptic female choice and the biology of passerine sperm
Míčková, Kristýna ; Albrecht, Tomáš (advisor) ; Vrbacký, Marek (referee) ; Krist, Miloš (referee)
The discovery of postcopulatory mechanisms of mate choice has fundamentally altered our understanding of sexual selection. Passerines are an ideal group for studying two basic mechanisms of postcopulatory sexual selection, sperm competition and cryptic female choice. This doctoral thesis focuses on postcopulatory sexual selection in passerines from three different angles. In this study, we investigated (1) age-related changes in traits that can affect male reproductive success (sperm morphology, velocity and production) and a trade-off between these traits and lifespan in male barn swallows (Hirundo rustica); (2) variation in seminal fluid and sperm proteins in six selected passerine species and whether these differences are caused by phylogeny or postcopulatory sexual selection; and (3) the protein composition of female barn swallow cloacal fluids in four phases of the reproductive season, changes in protein composition in individual phases, and identification of phase-specific proteins. Our results show that there is no unified trend for changes in sperm traits or sperm production across male lifespan. While sperm morphology and velocity do not change considerably, sperm production increases in first years of life. However, excessive investment in sperm production could reduce the male's chances...

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