Paternity share predicts sons' fetal testosterone.

Sci Rep

Hula Research Center, Department of Animal Sciences, Tel-Hai College, 1220800, Upper Galilee, Israel.

Published: October 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Multiple paternity is a common reproductive strategy observed in various species, providing males with clear advantages, while the benefits for females are more ambiguous and may include improved genetic diversity in offspring.
  • In a study of nutria, an invasive species where dominant males typically father most offspring, researchers found a significant occurrence of multiple paternity throughout gestation, with dominant males siring fetuses having higher testosterone levels than those from less common fathers.
  • This suggests that nutria females might be selecting for genetic diversity in their litters, potentially serving as a bet-hedging strategy to enhance reproductive success despite the risk of some sons having lower testosterone levels and, consequently, less potential reproductive success.

Article Abstract

Multiple paternity is common in many species. While its benefits for males are obvious, for females they are less clear. Female indirect benefits may include acquiring 'good genes' for offspring or increasing litter genetic diversity. The nutria (Myocastor coypus) is a successful invasive species. In its native habitat, it is polygynous, with larger and more aggressive males monopolizing paternity. Here, using culled nutria we genetically examined multiple paternity in-utero and found a high incidence of multiple paternity and maintenance of the number of fathers throughout gestation. Moreover, male fetuses sired by the prominent male have higher testosterone levels. Despite being retained, male fetuses of 'rare' fathers, siring commonly only one of the fetuses in the litter, have lower testosterone levels. Considering the reproductive skew of nutria males, if females are selected for sons with higher future reproductive success, low testosterone male fetuses are expected to be selected against. A possible ultimate explanation for maintaining multiple paternity could be that nutria females select for litter genetic diversity e.g., a bet-hedging strategy, even at the possible cost of reducing the reproductive success of some of their sons. Reproductive strategies that maintain genetic diversity may be especially beneficial for invasive species, as they often invade through a genetic bottleneck.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10551022PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-42718-6DOI Listing

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