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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() Molecular EcologyVolume 12 Issue 6, Pages 1567 - 1576 Published Online: 25 Apr 2003 © 2010 Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 135K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Early male reproductive advantage, multiple paternity and sperm storage in an amphibian aggregate breeder Copyright © 2003 Blackwell Publishing Ltd KEYWORDS
Ambystoma
• early male advantage • microsatellites • paternity • reproductive success • sperm storage Abstract
We tested whether the order in which males encounter females affects reproductive fitness in spotted salamanders (Ambystoma maculatum). Using mating chambers in the field, we allowed one male access to a female before a second male. We then used four microsatellite markers in paternity analyses of the resulting larvae. First males sired a significantly larger number of offspring than second males, suggesting that male reproductive success is greatly enhanced by early arrival at breeding ponds. Multiple paternity was common among clutches, and frequently larvae were assigned to unidentified males that had not been in the chambers. Sperm from these males had either been stored by females for a year or obtained more recently at other breeding sites. Received 22 May 2002; revision received 14 October 2002; accepted 27 January 2003 |