Authors
Carlos Cordero
Publication date
1995/6/21
Journal
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Volume
174
Issue
4
Pages
453-461
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Males of many insect species transfer, within the ejaculate, substances that render females sexually unreceptive and promote ovulation and oviposition. In this paper, I propose hypotheses for the evolutionary origin of these substances and discuss how selection may have modified them subsequently. Two hypotheses are considered. According to the handicap hypothesis, receptivity inhibition substances (RIS) and ovulation and oviposition stimulating substances (OSS) are used by females to evaluate the quality of the ejaculate received, the last being a function of the genetic or phenotypic quality of sperm, and of the nutritional or protective (to the female or her offspring) quality of its chemical constituents. This hypothesis predicts that RIS and OSS must be reliable indictors of ejaculate quality, reliability being the result of the high RIS/OSS production costs and specific chemical composition. The second hypothesis …
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