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Friday, 10 July 2009 07:39

Attractive Males Less Fertile Than Unattractive Males

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Researchers from UCL and the University of Oxford are claiming that attractive males release fewer sperm per mating to maximise the number of offspring they can produce. Because more attractive males have greater access to a range of females, the optimum strategy is to produce less sperm and mate with more females. This means that attractive males may be less fertile than unattractive males.

In a paper to be published in the journal American Naturalist, the team mathematically modelled a range of male ejaculation strategies to look for the optimum “sperm load” per mating, and how this might vary depending on mating patterns. Previous studies have shown that in animals such as the domestic fowl, and fish such as the Arctic charr, males with privileged access to females produce ejaculates of lower fertilising quality than subordinate males.

Sam Tazzyman, UCL CoMPLEX (Centre for Mathematics and Physics in the Life Sciences and Experimental Biology), says: “In some species, females mate with many different males. Each male’s sperm competes with that of other males in a process known as ‘sperm competition’. Since males have finite resources to allocate to breeding, they allocate them carefully to each mating to maximise their number of offspring. If a male puts a lot of resources into each mating he will get more offspring per mating, but at the expense of fewer matings. If, on the other hand, a male puts few resources into each mating he will secure less paternity per mating, but will be able to carry out more matings overall. Thus, there is a trade-off between number of matings and success per mating."

“How a male negotiates this trade-off depends on how easy he finds it to attract females. The more attractive a male is, the more females will be willing to mate with him, reducing the value of each mating to him. This means it is optimal for him to contribute fewer sperm per mating. Although this reduces fertility per mating, it maximises the number of offspring he sires overall. Less attractive males secure fewer matings but value each of them more highly, and by allocating more sperm to each mating make the most of their meagre opportunities. This leads to the rather paradoxical prediction that matings with attractive males may be less fertile than those with unattractive males."

“There are as yet few good examples of this process found in nature, as it has generally been assumed that more attractive or higher quality males will be more fertile. A possible case can be seen in chickens, which in the wild live in groups of varying numbers of males and females. Females mate with many males, so males are subject to sperm competition. However, the attractiveness of a male is determined in large part by his social standing. Males higher up the pecking order find it easier to secure matings with the females, but they transfer fewer sperm to females. In addition, the sperm of dominant birds is less motile and has lower fertilising efficiency than the sperm of subordinate birds. Scientists can artificially change the pecking order, and when this is done, the new dominant male's sperm quickly loses motility, while that of males reduced to subordinate status increases in motility.”

“Further work in this area should look at males that are similarly attractive, but have different levels of resources to allocate to sperm production, to see how this alters their sperm number and quality. The model should also be expanded to include the effects of short-term sperm depletion, which is known to affect ejaculate content when males re-mate quickly. We also would like to explore whether the lower fertility of attractive males causes females to start avoiding attractive males that mate too often, as these males reduce their fertility.”

“Finally, how this work applies to humans and other primates is not yet known. Human attractiveness is complicated and influenced by a number of factors including cultural preferences. Nonetheless, ejaculate size and sperm quality are likely to have been moulded by similar forces, like attractiveness and the number of sexual partners, that are important in other species.”

 

Source: UCL (Press Release)

2 comments

  • Comment Link Keiron Monday, 04 April 2011 11:08 posted by Keiron

    Hi Tim

    I think you have used good reasoning to reach your conclusions; however, evolution isn't so reasonable. More children means greater proliferation of genes and more children with different mothers leads to greater diversity and a greater chance that more of the offspring will survive.

    Also, breastfeeding produces hormonal changes that make females less fertile, which means that even in countries where there is very little contraception children are still born on average about 3 years apart.

    This does not mean that it is impossible to concieve while breastfeeding; it just means they are less likely to concieve

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  • Comment Link Tim Friday, 25 March 2011 01:12 posted by Tim

    I would like to point out some alternative explanations for this. Is it possible that this is actually an advantage for partnered men? attractive men are more likely to secure an attractive long-term mate, making regular, willing sex a pretty good possibility. It is more likely with a partner that you will impregnate her since sex is more frequent, as opposed to randomly mating with anyone who is willing. Therefore, it's a GOOD thing (before the condom was invented anyway) to not impregnate your woman anytime she's ready. That results in far too many children, a strained father AND mother, and a far greater risk for pregnancy complications and death in childbirth.

    It's my opinion that attractive males are sparing themselves and their woman from having a baby every 10 months or so. A bigger time gap between children makes it far easier to care for children, making it more likely they will survive and carry on your attractive genes, and your woman will survive to help with care-taking.

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Keiron Walsh

Keiron Walsh

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