AI Article Synopsis

  • Bacteria can harm sperm, reducing reproductive success in eusocial hymenopterans, particularly due to their limited mating opportunities.
  • Males die shortly after mating, while queens use the sperm for years, leading to strong selection for sperm viability and antimicrobial protection.
  • Our study found that while the male accessory testes promote bacterial growth, the female spermatheca effectively inhibits it, indicating a trade-off between immunity and reproduction that is activated during mating.

Article Abstract

Bacteria can damage sperm and thus reduce the reproductive success of both males and females; selection should therefore favour the evolution of antimicrobial protection. Eusocial hymenopterans might be particularly affected by such bacterial infections because of their mating ecology. In both sexes, mating is restricted to a short window early in the adult stage; there are no further chances to mate later in life. Males die shortly after mating, but queens use the acquired sperm to fertilise their eggs for years, sometimes decades. The reproductive success of both sexes is, thus, ultimately sperm-limited, which maintains strong selection for high sperm viability before and after storage. We tested the antibacterial activity of the contents of the male and female sperm-storage organs - the accessory testes and the spermatheca, respectively. As our study species, we used the bacterium and the garden ant , whose queens can live for several decades. Our results provide the first empirical evidence that male and female sperm-storage organs display different antibacterial activity. While the contents of the accessory testes actually enhanced bacterial growth, the contents of the spermatheca strongly inhibited it. Furthermore, mating appears to activate the general immune system in queens. However, antimicrobial activity in both the spermatheca and the control tissue (head-thorax homogenate) declined rapidly post-mating, consistent with a trade-off between immunity and reproduction. Overall, this study suggests that ejaculates undergo an immune 'flush' at the time of mating, allowing storage of sperm cells free of bacteria.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1242/jeb.175158DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

antibacterial activity
12
male female
12
female sperm-storage
12
sperm-storage organs
12
reproductive success
8
activity contents
8
accessory testes
8
mating
5
activity male
4
organs ants
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!