Muscles or testes? Comparative evidence for sexual competition among dioecious blood parasites (Schistosomatidae) of vertebrates
Schistosomes, which live as parasitic adults in the blood vessels of mammals, birds and crocodiles, are unique among trematodes because they have separate sexes. Several studies have shown that the sex ratio is often biased towards males. Sexual dimorphism can be very important in several genera (Sc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Parasitology 2000-01, Vol.120 (1), p.45-56 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Schistosomes, which live as parasitic adults in the blood vessels of mammals, birds and crocodiles, are unique among
trematodes because they have separate sexes. Several studies have shown that the sex ratio is often biased towards males.
Sexual dimorphism can be very important in several genera (Schistosoma, Heterobilharzia, Schistosomatium), as larger
males grip smaller females in a gynecophoric canal. But not all schistomatid species have developed a gynecophoric canal.
It is also striking that the number of testes varies widely, from a small number of testes reported (2–7) to a very high
number (>500). We tested the hypothesis of trade-off investment by males: muscle (as estimated by the length of the
gynecophoric canal) in order to sequester one or a few females, or testes in order to inseminate numerous females. We used
recent comparative methods, which need phylogenetic information of the analysed species. We employed a morphological
cladistic analysis of the Schistosomatidae and a construction of a phylogenetic supertree of Schistosoma based on available
molecular information. Our phylogenetic analysis supports previous hypotheses on the origin and diversification of the
schistosomes. The family seems to have originated as parasites of crocodiles (or possibly other related poikilotherms) and
to have secondarily evolved within the Aves and then mammals. Our phylogenetic analyses show that (1) the possession
of a gynecophoric canal is a plesiomorphic character, and several reductions of this character have occurred during the
diversification of the Schistosomatidae; (2) a small number of testes is a plesiomorphic stage, and an increase of testes
number has occurred several times. Finally, our comparative analysis suggests that there is a trade-off between investment
in muscle or in number of testes (other variables being controlled for). Male competition for access to females seems to
follow two ways: investment in testes in order to fertilize a high number of females or investment in muscle in order to
hold and sequester one (Schistosoma) or a few females (Heterobilharzia). We show the existence of the trade-off between
muscles and testes in connection with a male biased sex ratio. The development of dioecy cannot explain the trade-off
between muscles and testes, which instead appears to be a result of sexual selection possibly driven by the male biased
sex ratio. |
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ISSN: | 0031-1820 1469-8161 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0031182099005235 |