Abstract:
Sperm production represents a costly reproductive investment by males. High
reproductive competition within the female reproductive tract may select for higher
sperm counts or quality resulting in selection for larger testes size. In species where
females mate multiply or have more offspring per litter (litter size), or more litters
per year (litter rate), male reproductive competition may select for larger relative
testes size (i.e., scaled by body mass). Given that different mating systems vary in
the alternative forms of reproductive investment available to males, sperm production
levels may vary with social system. Here, we examined the relationship
between testes size and mating systems, litter size, and litter rate while considering
male lifespan and investment in paternal care in 224 terrestrial mammalian species
in 15 orders. Relative testes size was larger in species where females mated with
multiple males. Furthermore, in species with multiple mating females, species with
higher litter rates had larger testes compared to species with fewer litters per year.
In contrast, in monogamous species, species that had multiple litters per year had
smaller relative testes sizes compared to species with fewer litters per year. Neither
longevity nor paternal care influenced testes size. Our results elucidate the effect of
female reproductive strategies on relative testes size is nuanced and varies between
mating systems. Our findings suggest that the interplay between male reproductive
investment and female reproductive investment may be different within similar
social mating systems.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT : Data and code are available on the GitHub repository https://github.com/annemarievdmarel/meta-analysis_mammal_testessize
(van der Marel et al., 2023).
SUPPORTING INFORMATION : FIGURE S1. The relationship of log-transformed testes mass on log-transformed body mass for 571 terrestrial mammal species. TABLE S1. Full summary of the intercept-only model (M1) describing relative testes size in terrestrial mammals. TABLE S2. Full summary of the factors affecting relative testes size in terrestrial mammals (global model, M2). TABLE S3. Full summary of the factors affecting relative testes size in terrestrial mammals excluding the potential outlier the tenrec (interaction model with LooIC of 317.6). TABLE S4. Full summary of the factors affecting relative testes size in a subset of terrestrial mammals with a litter size ≤ 1 (interaction model, M5). TABLE S5. Full summary of the factors affecting relative testes size calculated as testes divided by body mass (interaction model, M6, with LooIC of 596.1 [592.2–600.5]).