Paternity analysis of two male mating tactics in the fiddler crab, Uca mjoebergi

Date

2012

Authors

Reaney, Leeann
Maurer, Golo
Backwell, Patricia
Linde, Celeste

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Abstract

The fiddler crab Uca mjoebergi mates both underground in male-defended burrows and on the surface near female-defended burrows. The reproductive tract of Uca species facilitates last-male precedence, suggesting that males that do not guard-mated females are likely to gain very little paternity if the female re-mates with another male. Here, we test the reproductive success of burrow and surface matings using paternity analysis. We found that 100 % of the females that mated in burrows extruded a clutch of eggs. Furthermore, we show conclusively, for the first time in a fiddler crab species, that last-male sperm precedence results in the majority of the female's eggs being fertilised by the burrow-mated male. In contrast, surface matings resulted in significantly fewer females extruding eggs (5. 6 %). Paternity analysis also revealed that more than half of the clutches from burrow-mated females showed low levels of extra-pair paternity from previous matings. Although multiple matings appear common in U. mjoebergi, burrow-mated males that guard females are guaranteed a successful mating with extremely high rates of assured paternity. Surface matings therefore appear to be an opportunistic tactic that may increase male reproductive success in a highly competitive environment.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: burrow; clutch size; crab; facilitation; male behavior; marine ecosystem; paternity; reproductive success; sperm; Ocypodidae; Uca Burrow mating; Fiddler crab; Flexible opportunistic tactic; Mate guarding; Paternity; Surface mating

Citation

Source

Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31