How females control sperm storage to pick the best dad

Washington, Sept 9 (ANI): University of Exeter researchers have found new evidence to explain how female insects can influence the father of their offspring, even after mating with up to ten males.

In the study, boffins found that female crickets are able to control the amount of sperm that they store from each mate to select the best father for their young.

According to researchers, the females may be using their abdominal muscles to control the amount of sperm stored from each mate.

The study has been published in the journal Molecular Ecology.

Female crickets mate with several different males, including their closest relatives. In general, offspring produced with close relatives are more likely to have genetic disorders.

Different animals employ a range of behaviours to avoid this, such as not mating other animals from the group they grow up in. Crickets do not avoid mating with relatives, but this research shows that they produce more offspring fathered by males that are unrelated to them.

In order to reach the conclusion, researchers bred field crickets in the laboratory. They used new DNA-based techniques to determine the quantity stored by each the female. hey found that the females stored a higher content of sperm from unrelated males. They then tested young crickets to determine their paternity.

The results showed that, regardless of the order in which they had mated, an unrelated mate was more likely to become a father. This must have been under female control, because the methods the team used meant that males could not influence the amount of sperm they passed to the female.

Though the study focused on field crickets, the findings are likely to be relevant in other insect species and possibly other sections of the animal kingdom.

Lead author Dr Amanda Bretman of the University of Exeter said: “Our study shows that even after mating, female insects control who fathers their offspring. We’re only really just beginning to understand the reasons for the different mating strategies in the insect world and that is thanks to new techniques.” (ANI)

Song birds have to deal with cover artists too

Washington, Sep 9 (ANI): Just like great singers among humans, birds too have to deal with cover artists who copy songs.

A new research has revealed that some bird species have evolved to sing the same tune as their rivals, in order to compete effectively.

Led by Dr. Joseph Tobias and Dr Nathalie Seddon from the Edward Grey Institute, University of Oxford, the research team analysed the calls and songs of two antbird species that were living side-by-side in the Amazon rainforest- the Peruvian warbling-antbird and the yellow-breasted warbling-antbird.

The study was aimed at investigating their similar songs, and, in particular, at testing the theory that the birds’ songs could become increasingly similar to enable effective communication between competing species.

The above notion has attracted controversy as many scientists have argued that convergence in territorial or mating signals results in needless confrontation or crossbreeding and the creation of hybrids.

“Biologists have long been fascinated by convergence in ecological traits as it offers tangible evidence of evolution and the forces of selection by which it operates, but until now there is no clear evidence that social competition between animal species can produce convergent signals. We examined this idea by analysing the structure and function of songs in two birds which we knew to be strong social competitors,” said Tobias.

The researchers studied the species in Peru and Bolivia at one site where they lived together, and two sites where they lived in isolation.

Firstly, they recorded three sets of signals-songs, calls, and plumage colour of both species (including a total of 504 songs from 150 individuals).

Later, they played them back to individuals of each species to test the significance of songs of both types.

The results showed that territorial songs of both species were extremely similar particularly where they lived together, such that territorial birds treated songs of both species as equally threatening.

In the meantime, they discovered that non-territorial signals like calls and plumage were highly divergent.

“In effect, the territorial songs of these birds are more or less interchangeable in design and function. Given that they last shared a common ancestor more than 3 million years ago, it is almost equivalent to humans and chimpanzees – which diverged around 5 million years ago – using the same language to settle disputes over resources” said Tobias.

“Our results provide the first compelling evidence that social interaction can cause convergent evolution in species competing for space and resources.

They also suggest that while competition drives convergence in territorial songs, this is offset by divergence in non-competitive signals such as plumage colour to promote species recognition and reduce the chance of interbreeding,” he added.

The study has been published in Evolution.(ANI)

Smart people are sexier

Wellington, Sep 2 (ANI): A person’s sex quotient lies in his or her brain, according to a study that suggests that being smart is sexy, and the smartest males get the most partners.

Through a study on Australian birds, a team of researchers have lent support to the idea that our big human brain evolved because it is a sexually attractive organ, not just a useful one.

According to the above theory, signs of intelligence – such as creating art, music, and humour – could have made the brainiest people luckiest in love.

The theory was hugely discussed in the book ‘The Mating Mind’ by an evolutionary psychologist, Geoffrey Miller, almost a decade ago.

Jason Keagy, of the University of Maryland in the US, said that testing the theory in humans was very difficult, and thus he chose to observe satin bowerbirds at Wallaby Creek in NSW instead.

He claimed that Bowerbirds are intelligent.

“But they’re not as complex as humans,” Stuff.co.nz quoted him as saying.

Keagy could get an accurate record of the male birds’ sexual success by videotaping their every movement.

“They can’t really lie to us,” he said.

Known for their fascination with blue objects, bowerbirds have a strong aversion to red.

In the first IQ test, the researchers placed three red objects under a clear plastic container in their bower, and found that the smartest males could remove the cover and carry away the offending objects in 20 seconds.

“It looks pretty simple, but some weren’t able to do it,” said Keagy.

In a second braintwister, he glued a red object down and observed that some bowerbirds kept on trying in vain to pull it out, while the brighter ones quickly twigged this was impossible and covered it with leaves.

The males who failed the plastic container test were spurned.

“No females were mating with them,” said Keagy.

However, the smartest birds attracted up to 20 female partners a season.

“This is the first evidence [in any species] that individuals with better problem-solving abilities are more sexually attractive,” he said.

He claimed that greater intelligence could allow male bowerbirds to woo more females because they can build more elaborate bowers, are better dancers or are more responsive to subtle cues from the females during courtship.

Alternative theories to the mating mind include that our large brain evolved because it was advantageous for hunting or living in social groups, and cultural creativity was simply a fortuitous by-product of the struggle to survive.

The study has been published in the journal Animal Behaviour. (ANI)

Men with high testosterone levels ‘more likely to have multiple wives’

London, Aug 28 (ANI): Men with high testosterone levels are more likely to have multiple wives, according to a new study.

They also give less attention to their kids.

High testosterone levels have been linked to increased sexual activity, infidelity and marital conflict. However, after men become fathers, their bodies typically pump out less of the hormone.

“This is good for us, so we can adapt to social challenges very quickly,” New Scientist quoted Alexandra Alvergne, an anthropologist at the University of Montpellier, France, and the University of Sheffield, UK, who led the new study, as saying.

In the study involving rural Senegalese villagers, the researchers underscored testosterone’s critical role in a mating and parenting.

Lead researcher Alexandra Alvergne, an anthropologist at the University of Montpellier, France, and the University of Sheffield, UK measured testosterone levels in 21 polygynous fathers as well as 32 monogamous dads and 28 unmarried men without children.

The researchers also asked the men’s wives about the time and money their husband spent to the family.

The findings revealed that no matter how many wives they had, fathers had lower testosterone levels than single men, on average.

It also showed that among fathers, those with more testosterone tended to invest less time in their wives and children.

And polygynous men under the age of 50 produced more testosterone than monogamous men, on average.

According to Alvergne, older men with more than one wife made less of the sex hormone than other men. While older men may make less testosterone, they typically enjoy more prestige in their villages, which could make it easier to find multiple wives.

The study appears in journal Hormones and Behavior. (ANI)

Some Aussie frogs raise pitch of love songs to counter traffic noise

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Some Aussie frogs often raise their pitch as they serenade their partners, in order to counter traffic sounds, according to a study.

Kirsten Parris, an ecologist at the University of Melbourne, says that one species of frog in Melbourne is changing the pitch of its love song to be heard above the roar of the road.

For the study, Parris visited many urban ponds and pools inhabited by frogs, measuring traffic noise, which is, unfortunately, at the same low frequencies as many frog mating calls.

But, for the onomatopoeic ‘pobblebonk’ (Limnodynastes dumerilii), she found that a call that could originally be heard by a female 800 metres away might only carry 98 metres above 60 decibels of traffic noise, an average value for Melbourne.

She has also discovered that the southern brown tree frog (Litoria ewingii) seems to be compensating for the traffic noise by increasing the pitch of its calls1 (listen to before and after calls).

Parris suggested that installing noise barriers at strategic points around a road could help urban frogs to hear each other.

She further said that creating habitats where they thrive – such as ponds with sloping rather than steep sides – would also make sense.

“Cities provide some of the last habitat for a range of frog species around the world. So if we only worry about conserving frogs and their habitats outside cities, some of these frogs may well go extinct,” she said.

She added: “Some frog species are very sensitive to environmental changes”, but “others are quite adaptable and can persist in urban habitats if we gave them a bit of help”.

However, Kris Kaiser, an ecology graduate student at the University of California, Los Angeles, has put forward a note of caution on the subject of these amphibians’ adaptability.

“Frogs, unlike birds, are thought to have the frequency of their calls somewhat constrained by their anatomy. There is often a relationship between body size and frequency of call,” he said.

Thus, he claimed that the creatures’ ability to compensate for traffic noise may be limited.

The study was presented at the International Congress of Ecology in Brisbane. (ANI)

Female fruit flies prefer keeping sex short to get a reproductive boost

Washington, August 22 (ANI): A new study has shown that female fruit flies prefer keeping sex short and sweet because they get a reproductive boost from shorter intercourse.

Since males like sex to last longer, a fight ensues.

“After about a minute and a half (of mating), the female begins kicking and struggling,” National Geographic News quoted Kirsten Klappert, of the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, as having written in the study report.

The researcher notes that when mating lasts longer, female flies have less time to mate again with a different male, if they do so at all.

Although that is good for males flies, as it means that their sperm have less competition, it can be disastrous for females.

“Many male Drosophila montana are infertile, so if you only mate with one you have a high risk of no offspring at all,” Klappert said.

During the study, Klappert’s team paired live males with dead females to see how much control female flies have over mating length.

The dead insects were propped up to convince the males that they were still alive, and ready for sex, said the researchers.

The team observed that male flies’ sex with the dead insects lasted 1.5 times longer than it did with live females.

This finding does attain significance because scientists at other institutions believe that humans can relate to the female fruit fly’s desires.

Rhonda Snook, a senior lecturer at the University of Sheffield in England who studies sexual selection and reproductive behaviour in fruit flies, said: “I don’t know you could say human females want longer copulation, per se. It’s really the foreplay, not the actual act of copulation. In the insects, prior to that, there’s courtship going on, and that’s like foreplay in humans.”

A research article describing Klappert’s study has been published in the journal BMC Evolutionary Biology. (ANI)

Why male and female lemurs are of same size

Washington, July 15 (ANI): Rice University biologist Amy Dunham has put forward a new theory for one of primatology’s long-standing mysteries-why are male and female lemurs the same size?

In most primate species, males have evolved to be much larger than females, but this has not been found to be true in case of lemurs.

Some theories have suggested that environment played a role or that lemur social development was altered due to the extinction of predatory birds.
“Scientifically, this is quite a big question that researchers have debated for over 20 years. I actually started doing research on lemurs as an undergraduate, working in Ranomafana (National Park in Madgascar), and the question about size monomorphism has bugged me since then,” said Dunham.
In the new study, Dunham has offered one of the first new theories on lemur monomorphism in more than a decade.
After conducting an exhaustive review of the observational work done on lemurs, Dunham concluded that male lemurs do guard their mates, just like other primates.

But unlike gorillas and other primates that fight for mating rights with females, male lemurs have evolved to passively guard their mates.
They do this by depositing a solid plug inside the female’s reproductive tract just as they finish mating. The plug is deposited as a liquid protein but quickly hardens and stays in place for a day or two.

Since many female lemurs are sexually responsive to males for only one day out of the entire year, the plug serves the purpose of preventing other males from mating with the female, while also freeing the male to mate with other females during the brief time they are available.
“If the female has a short receptivity period, as most lemurs do, then we hypothesize that this is likely to be an advantageous strategy,” said Dunham.
To test their hypothesis, the researchers examined 62 primate species and found that copulatory plugs were most likely to occur in species where female sexual receptivity was very brief and where males and females were the same size.

This was true both for lemur species and for a few other species, like South American squirrel monkeys.
The study has been published in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology. (ANI

Amphibians like to mate under a full Moon

London, July 14 (ANI): Scientists have discovered that amphibians around the world synchronize their mating activity by the full Moon.

According to a report by BBC News, this global phenomenon has never been noticed before, but frogs, toads and newts all like to mate by moonlight.

The animals use the lunar cycle to co-ordinate their gatherings, ensuring that enough males and females come together at the same time.

In doing so the creatures maximize their spawning success and reduce their odds of being eaten.

Biologist Rachel Grant of the Open University, UK, was studying salamanders near a lake in central Italy for her PhD in 2005 when she noticed toads all over the road, under a full Moon.

“Although this might have been a coincidence, the following month I went along the same route every day at dusk and found that the numbers of toads on the road increased as the Moon waxed, to a peak at full Moon, and then declined again,” she said.

A review of the scientific literature found little mention of any similar records, so Grant returned to the same site in 2006 and 2007 to survey the amphibians in more detail.

She then collated her data with a 10-year analysis of the mating habits of frogs and toads at a pond near Oxford, UK, collected by her supervisor Tim Halliday, and with data on toads and newts living in Wales collected by colleague Elizabeth Chadwick from Cardiff University, UK.

“We analysed the data, and found a lunar effect at all three sites,” Grant said.

For example, the common toad (Bufo bufo) arrives at all its breeding sites, mates and spawns around the full Moon. The common frog (Rana temporaria) also spawns around the time of the full Moon.

“Newts also seem to be affected by the lunar cycle but the results are less clear,” said Grant.

Newt arrivals peak during both the full and new moons.

The researchers have also looked at historical data collected in Java on the Javanese toad and found that it too mates by the lunar cycle, with females ovulating on or near to the full Moon.

“We now have evidence of lunar cycles affecting amphibians in widespread locations. We definitely think that Moon phase has been an overlooked factor in most studies of amphibian reproductive timing,” said Grant.

“We think this may be a worldwide phenomenon. However, differences between species in ecology and reproductive strategy may mean that not all amphibians are affected in the same way. This is something we would like to investigate further,” she added. (ANI)

Matings with attractive males may be less fertile than those with unattractive ones

Washington, July 10 (ANI): A team of University College London and University of Oxford researchers say that a study on the evolution of ejaculation strategies has shown that attractive males release fewer sperm per mating to maximise their chances of producing offspring across a range of females.

Writing about their findings in the journal American Naturalist, the researchers say that their findings suggest that, paradoxically, matings with attractive males may be less fertile than those with unattractive ones.

They 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.

Studies conducted in the past 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.

“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,” says University College London researcher Sam Tazzyman.

“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,” Tazzyman adds. (ANI)

Male seahorses prefer large females

Washington, July 8 (ANI): Swiss scientists have found that male seahorses have a strong preference for large females when it comes to selecting a mating partner.

According to Beat Mattle and Tony Wilson from the Zoological Museum at the University of Zurich in Switzerland, by being choosy and preferring large females, they are likely to have more and bigger eggs, as well as bigger offspring,

Seahorses have a unique mode of reproduction: male pregnancy. Male seahorses provide all post-fertilization parental care, yet despite the high levels of paternal investment, they have long been thought to have conventional sex roles, with females choosing mating partners and males competing for their attention.

However, clutch, egg and offspring size all increase with female body size in seahorses, suggesting that males may obtain fecundity benefits by mating with large-bodied females.

The researchers investigated the mating behaviour of the pot-bellied seahorse (Hippocampus abdominalis), concentrating on the importance of partner body size in mate selection.

A total of 10 female and 16 male sexually mature seahorses, obtained from a captive breeding facility in Tasmania, took part in the experiment.

Individuals of both sexes were presented with potential mating partners of different sizes. Mating preferences were quantified in terms of time spent courting each potential partner.

The researchers found striking differences in courtship behaviour between male and female seahorses, with choosy males and indiscriminate females.

Male seahorses were highly active and showed a clear preference for larger partners. In contrast, females were significantly less active and showed ambiguous mating preferences.

“The strong male preferences for large females demonstrated here suggest that sexual selection may act strongly on female body size in wild populations of H. abdominalis, consistent with predictions on the importance of female body size for reproductive output in this species,” the authors said.

The study has been published online in Springer’s journal Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. (ANI)

Cockroaches, too, get fat eating unhealthy diet

Washington, July 4 (ANI): Just like humans, cockroaches too can get fat on an unhealthy diet, says a British researcher.

Patricia Moore, of the University of Exeter, came to this conclusion after studying how female cockroaches change their mating behaviour in response to their diet, specifically what they eat when they are young, as part of a decade’s worth of research.

“We already knew that what they eat as adults influences reproductive decisions,” Live Science quoted Moore as saying.

However, it was not known how the food consumed by the eternal pests in life shaped these decisions.

To find out, Moore’s team picked young female cockroach nymphs, and divided them into two dietary groups.

She revealed that the cockroaches in one group were fed a good-quality balanced diet of protein-rich fish food and high-carbohydrate oatmeal, while the rest were raised on fish food only.

She further revealed that both groups could eat as much as they wanted.

The difference in diets “was not quantity but variety,” Moore said.

When the nymphs became adults, the researchers switched the diets of some of them.

Half of the cockroaches raised with good quality diet lost their oatmeal, while half of the bugs fed poorly were promoted to a good-quality diet.

Moore said that 18 days after the switch, the diet control ended. While some of the surviving cockroaches were dissected, she said, the rest were allowed to live on and reproduce.

The researchers observed that while the lifespan of the members of both groups was about the same, the cockroaches on the poor diet were fatter and took longer to mature.

Moore said that the poorly fed bugs were storing up excess fat at the expense of their growth in case their dietary options got even worse.

“This was a surprising result, but it shows the importance of a balanced diet for healthy development,” she said

According to her, the effects of unbalanced meals continued throughout the cockroaches’ lives, even for the few that were switched to good-quality food.

She and her colleagues observed that females fed on a poor-quality diet were less willing to mate, and less likely to produce offspring.

Such females were also more picky, and spent more time considering possible mates, said the researchers.

Based on the study’s findings, Moore concluded: “Poor diets (during early life) have an effect on the way cockroaches respond to their environment and cannot be reset later on.”

A research article describing the study has been published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Good male seed beetles make for bad dads

Washington, June 26 (ANI): A new study on seed beetles has shown that, contrary to predictions, males of high genetic quality are not very successful when it comes to fertilizing eggs.

The study, conducted by Swedish and Danish scientists Goran Arnqvist and Trine Bilde, found that when female mates with several males, the males of low genetic quality are the most successful in fertilizing eggs.

In almost all animals, females mate with several different males, despite the fact that a single mating is often sufficient to fertilize her eggs.

One commonly held belief is that this behaviour may allow females to choose the sperm of the male with highest genetic quality to fertilize her eggs.

Professor Goran Arnqvist from the Department of Ecology and Evolution, Uppsala University and associate professor Trine Bilde from the Department of Biological Sciences, University of Aarhus, tested this possibility directly for the first time using seed beetles and shown that it is not true.

The researchers found that, contrary to predictions, males of low genetic quality are more successful in fertilizing eggs.

Males who gained the highest share of paternity were actually males with low genetic quality. These males also fathered offspring that did less well.

“The results support the suggestion that genes that are good for males may often be bad for their mates. Therefore, in beetles at least, multiple mating does not award females with genetic benefits,” Arnqvist said.

The study is published in this week’s issue of Science. (ANI)

How small ‘guys’ can get the ‘gals’ just as their bigger counterparts

Washington, June 25 (ANI): In the world of yellow dung flies, the small guys can also get the girl, but only if they are hanging out on apple pomace instead of cow dung, reveals a new study.

While the large, brawny males almost always have an upper hand in getting a mate, but this is the first time that alternative male reproductive strategies have been observed in this species.

Syracuse University (N.Y.) undergraduate students found that small male dung flies, which are traditionally unsuccessful at finding and keeping mates on dung pats, successfully mated with females feeding on composting apple pomace.

In fact, large males were generally absent from the pomace mounds.

“This is a new chapter in the story of yellow dung flies. No one has carefully studied this species off the dung. Small male dung flies can’t compete with their larger counterparts on the dung, so in this case, they developed a different tactic to successfully pass their genes to the next generation,” said Scott Pitnick, professor of biology in SU’s College of Arts and Sciences.

The students were tasked with designing a study around the size and mating success of yellow dung flies.

“After we made our initial field observations for the class assignment, we could tell from our professors’ reactions that our discovery was a piece of important information in the field. The course was designed to teach us how to be biologists; as such, we made a unique observation that ultimately resulted in a publication,” said Stephen Maheux ’09, a biology major who graduated in May.

The researchers believed that yellow dung flies mated almost exclusively on manure and females were drawn to the dung only when they are ready to mate.

However, Pitnick said that not much is known about the feeding habits of females when they are not at the dung pats.

On the other hand, males were thought to hang out almost exclusively around the manure, awaiting the arrival of the females.

Competition on the dung among males is fierce and can result in injury or death to smaller males as well as females caught up in the struggle.

However, on Toad Hollow Farms in Nedrow, N.Y., the students noticed large numbers of females feeding on apple pomace in a field adjacent to the cow pasture where they were observing flies on dung pats.

Surprisingly, the females were frequently mating on the pomace, and with males that were significantly smaller in size than those found in the cow pasture.

Furthermore, none of the sexually aggressive behaviours normally observed on the dung pats occurred on the pomace.

Apple pomace is the pressed pulp that remains after juicing.

The students’ initial observations suggested that the availability of the pomace seemed to provide male dung flies with alternative mating opportunities.

The study is published in the latest issue of Proceedings of The Royal Society. (ANI)

Quiet guys in the corner, not flashy ones, score more with females

Washington, June 19 (ANI): Being heavily focused on keeping up appearance might serve as a successful “advertisement” for attracting mates, however, in some species, like stickleback fish, it’s the caring ones who score.

Yale scientists theorize that when males must provide care for the survival of their offspring, the males’ signals will consistently be honest – and they may devote more of their energy to caring for their offspring than to being attractive.

The idea that males showcase their best qualities to attract females for mating isn’t a new one, nor is the idea that they might be deceptive in what they are promoting.
nstead, the new findings better predict the requirement for honesty in advertising as a function of the male’s suitability for parenting, according to Natasha Kelly, a graduate student in ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale and lead author of the study.

When a male’s energy is heavily focused on keeping up his appearance, he may have little energy to devote to caring for offspring. But that may be okay, say the researchers – in species where he does not really need to tend to the kids.

However, the new model, now appearing in the online version of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, examines the reliability of males’ mating signals when they must care for offspring.

There are many species in which males could, but do not have to, provide parental care – because females will pick up the slack. The Yale researchers focused on those species, like stickleback fish, where females cannot pick up the slack and males who do not provide care risk the survival of their offspring.

“This new work shows that when males can not escape the cost of failing to provide care, their advertisements will tend to tend to reliably indicate how much care they will provide,” said senior author Suzanne Alonzo, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale.

“The qualifier in this case is where males are obligated to provide care,” said Kelly.

“In that case, the quiet guy in the corner might be giving the more reliable advertisement for fatherhood,” the expert added. (ANI)

How genetics influences mate selection among humans

Washington, May 25 (ANI): Shedding new light on how humans choose their partners, a Brazilian scientist has revealed that people have an inherent tendency to get attracted towards genetically opposite individuals.

Professor Maria da Graca Bicalho, head of the Immunogenetics and Histocompatibility Laboratory at the University of Parana, has said that people with diverse major histocompatibility complexes (MHCs) were more likely to choose each other as mates than those whose MHCs were similar.

And she said that this tendency was likely to be an evolutionary strategy to ensure healthy reproduction.

Previous studies have already shown females’ preference for MHC dissimilar mates in many vertebrate species, including humans, and it is also known that MHC influences mating selection by preferences for particular body odours.

In the current study, the researchers decided to investigate mate selection in the Brazilian population, while trying to uncover the biological significance of MHC diversity.

They studied MHC data from 90 married couples, and compared them with 152 randomly generated control couples.

They also counted the number of MHC dissimilarities among those who were real couples, and compared them with those in the randomly-generated ‘virtual couples’.

“If MHC genes did not influence mate selection, we would have expected to see similar results from both sets of couples. But we found that the real partners had significantly more MHC dissimilarities than we could have expected to find simply by chance,” said Bicalho.

Within MHC-dissimilar couples the partners will be genetically different, and such a pattern of mate choice decreases the danger of endogamy (mating among relatives) and increases the genetic variability of offspring.

It’s known that genetic variability is an advantage for offspring,and scientists said that the MHC effect could be an evolutionary strategy underlying incest avoidance in humans and also improving the efficiency of the immune system.

“Although it may be tempting to think that humans choose their partners because of their similarities. Our research has shown clearly that it is differences that make for successful reproduction, and that the subconscious drive to have healthy children is important when choosing a mate,” said Bicalho.

The scientists believe that the findings will help understanding of conception, fertility and gestational failures.

Bicalho will present the findings at the annual conference of the European Society of Human Genetics. (ANI)

Trauma prior to pregnancy affects offspring’s behaviour

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Trauma experienced by a mother before pregnancy will influence her offspring’s behaviour, according to a study.

The study was conducted on rats at the University of Haifa.

“The findings show that trauma from a mother’s past, which does not directly impact her pregnancy, will affect her offspring’s emotional and social behaviour. We should consider whether such effects occur in humans too,” said Prof. Micah Leshem, who carried out the study.

Earlier studies have researched trauma during pregnancy, this is the first study to investigate trauma prior to conception.

Rats were used in the investigation as they have found to behave socially in a similar way to humans.

Researchers examined three groups of rats: one group was put through a series of stress-inducing activities two weeks before mating, allowing the female time to recover before becoming pregnant; the second group was similarly treated over the course of a week immediately prior to mating; and the third, control group, were not given any form of stress.

Once the offspring of the rats had matured and were over 60 days old, their social and emotional behaviour, such as amount of anxiety and depression, was evaluated.

The study found that trauma experienced by the females prior to conception had varied effects on the offspring.

According to Leshem, these effects varied between groups and between male and female offspring; but their behaviour was without doubt different from that of the rats from the control group.

All the offspring of stressed mothers showed reduced social contact compared with that of the control mothers’ offspring: these rats spent less time with one another and interacted less.

In other tests, there were important sex differences. The female rats displayed more symptoms of anxiety, while the males exhibited less anxiety.

Finally, those rats whose mothers became pregnant immediately after being stressed were hyperactive, indicating that how long before pregnancy adversity is experienced, is also important.

“The findings of the present study show that adversity from a mother’s past, even well before her pregnancy, does affect her offspring, even when they are adult,” Leshem said.

The study is published in the journal Developmental Psychology. (ANI)

Offspring of promiscuous tit birds gets a head start to remain stronger

Melbourne, May 13 (ANI): Female tit birds are known for mating with rival males before their social partner, for giving genetic advantage to their chicks. But, a new study has questioned this belief by claiming that the chicks resulted from promiscuity are benefited only because they are laid and hatch earlier.

Dutch and Australian researchers have claimed that the chicks are stronger, larger, and more likely to survive simply because they get a head start over chicks produced from faithful unions.

Dr. Michael Magrath, of the University of Melbourne’s Department of Zoology, says that this means they begin feeding earlier than their half-siblings, who may hatch as much as five days later.

For the study, the researchers numbered 1732 eggs from 190 blue tit bird nests in the order in which they were laid across two breeding seasons, and then placed the eggs in an incubator to note the order in which they hatched, before finally returning them to their original nest.

“Remarkably, almost 75 per cent of the offspring from these ‘extra-pair’ matings were produced in the first half of the clutch,” ABC News quoted him as saying.

On an average, the extra-pair chicks were hatched 10 hours before their half-siblings, which gave them time to gain an initial size advantage because they start feeding immediately.

The promiscuous nature of commonly monogamous female birds has puzzled researchers, but studies had earlier showed that the offspring of these so-called extra-pair matings were bigger, had better immune response, and were more likely to survive.

Thus, the researchers had concluded that these matings provided a genetic advantage.

“We don’t rule out the idea (extra-pair mating) is to gain a genetic advantage.

But we have shown what’s been considered good evidence isn’t that strong,” said Magrath.

The study has been published online in Current Biology. (ANI)

Waiter pal’s Gladiator-style thumbs up decides Russell Brand’s date’s fate

London, May 8 (ANI): Comedian Russell Brand, 33, relies upon a waiter pal’s Gladiator-style thumbs up to decide whether or not to dump his date.

In movie Gladiator, evil Roman Emperor Commodus – played by Joaquin Phoenix – decides on the fate of fighter Russell Crowe by giving the thumb signal.

Sources have revealed that, in the same fashion, the telly star gets the signal of approval if his trusted Maitre D’ likes the girl.

If the thumb goes down, they add, the date is dumped.

Brand admitted to his ruthless mating ritual when visited another restaurant in the trendy Farmer’s Market area in Los Angeles with a stunning pal.

“Russell came in on Tuesday night with a very attractive blonde,” the Sun quoted a restaurant worker as revealing.

“He said he normally takes his dates to the Ulysses Voyage nearby where the head waiter gives him the thumbs up or down to decide their future.

“But he said this one was really nice so he came in here as he didn’t want to subject her to that,” the source added.

The member of staff further said: “Russell was being very charming and attentive and they seemed to be having a great time. She was drinking Apple Martinis and he was joking it was Kryptonite. He then took her to see the film Ghosts Of Girlfriends Past at the cinema – which, given Russell’s reputation, was very fitting.” (ANI)

Spiders go for violent, but effective sex

London, May 1 (ANI): Spiders in Israel have been seen indulging in a violent but evolutionarily effective mating strategy, which guarantees direct fertilisation of eggs in the ovaries.

In the so-called traumatic insemination, males of the Harpactea sadistica species pierce the abdomen of females, and thus fertilise their eggs directly in the ovaries.

Such a practice provides the first male to inseminate a reproductive advantage by bypassing structures in the females’ genitalia, reports The BBC.

Although, other insects, including mites and bedbugs, have been known to use a similar strategy, but this is the first time that it has been seen in spiders.

Usually, spider males deliver their genetic package via sperm that is deposited into a small web and manually inserted via a pair of appendages on their undersides known as pedipalps.

Then, the sperm are held in a receptacle between the ovipore and ovary, known as a spermatheca, till the release of an egg.

But, the spermatheca is a “last in, first out” structure, thus if any further males inseminate a female, the last mate’s sperm is the first in line to fertilise an egg.

Milan Rezic, an entomologist at the Crop Research Institute in Prague, spotted a spider evade this problem by delivering sperm directly to the ovaries via holes that the males bore directly in the females’ abdomens.

Rezac named the species H. sadistica and pointed out that the species has specialised sex organs at the ends of its pedipalps, with one part specialised for gripping and another, hypodermic needle-like structure for injecting sperm.

And just like many spider mating rituals, H. sadistica ‘s approach follows an elaborate pattern-male taps the female, subdues her, and then wraps himself around her to properly position the sex organs.

Alter, he alternates between the two, piercing and injecting the sperm on one side, then the other, forming two neat rows of holes in her abdomen.

The researchers analysed the females of the species and found that their spermathecae are atrophied, or shrunken, in comparison to other spiders.

In an apparent case of co-evolution, they are apparently slowly shrinking into non-existence, as their purpose is being sidestepped by the males’ more direct approach.

The findings are reported in Proceedings of the Royal Society B. (ANI)

Ranchi Zoo announces birth of two leopard cubs

Ranchi, Apr 28 (ANI): Zoo authorities in Ranchi have announced the birth of two leopard cubs.

The cubs, one male and one female, were born on March 10 and are now being brought before the public.

“This leopard was brought from a rescue centre in Guwahati on November 8. In the last week of December, the mating took place and the cubs were born on March 10. Both cubs are healthy. It’s a matter of great pride for the zoo as it was after a long time a big cat gave birth in our zoo,” said M.S. Jain, a veterinarian at the zoo.

The cubs weigh 2.50 kilograms and 2.60 respectively and are 17 and 18 inches in length.

“I am very happy to see them. I have never seen such pretty cubs before. They are very sweet,” said Ratna Banerjee, a visitor.

Leopards are found all over the country.

It is illegal to kill leopards in India, as they are an endangered species. (ANI)