Data from: Post-copulatory opportunities for sperm competition and cryptic female choice provide no offspring fitness benefits in externally fertilizing salmon
There is increasing evidence that females can somehow improve their offspring fitness by mating with multiple males, but we understand little about the exact stage(s) at which such benefits are gained. Here, we measure whether offspring fitness is influenced by mechanisms operating solely between sp...
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Zusammenfassung: | There is increasing evidence that females can somehow improve their
offspring fitness by mating with multiple males, but we understand little
about the exact stage(s) at which such benefits are gained. Here, we
measure whether offspring fitness is influenced by mechanisms operating
solely between sperm and egg. Using externally fertilizing and polyandrous
Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), we employed split-clutch and
split-ejaculate in vitro fertilization experiments to generate offspring
using designs that either denied or applied opportunities for sperm
competition and cryptic female choice. Following fertilizations, we
measured 140 days of offspring fitness after hatch, through growth and
survival in hatchery and near-natural conditions. Despite an average
composite mortality of 61%, offspring fitness at every life stage was
near-identical between groups fertilized under the absence versus presence
of opportunities for sperm competition and cryptic female choice. Of the
21 551 and 21 771 eggs from 24 females fertilized under monandrous versus
polyandrous conditions, 68% versus 67.8% survived to the 100-day juvenile
stage; sub-samples showed similar hatching success (73.1% versus 74.3%),
had similar survival over 40 days in near-natural streams (57.3% versus
56.2%) and grew at similar rates throughout. We therefore found no
evidence that gamete-specific interactions allow offspring fitness
benefits when polyandrous fertilization conditions provide opportunities
for sperm competition and cryptic female choice. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.302jc |