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Snake Mating Systems, Behavior, and Evolution: The Revisionary Implications of Recent Findings Rivas, Jesus A., Burghardt, Gordon M. (2005). Snake Mating Systems, Behavior and Evolution: The Revisionary Implications of Recent Findings. Journal of Comparative Psychology. 119(4), 447-454. Laura Cain, Taylor Casillas, Sarah Fukui and Nick O’Brien Psychology of Sex Differences October 20, 2010 Difference between Polyandry and Polygyny? • Polyandry: A mating pattern in which a female mates with more than one male in a single breeding season. • Polygyny: few males monopolize access to many females – Benefit = mate with more females, spread genes • Ex: male elephant seals (dominant one gets to mate) • Previous to this study, it was widely believed that the primary form of reproduction in snakes is polygyny • Males have upper hand/advantage (sexual selection) – In mating (male-male competition) – Attractiveness to females (body size, morphological behavior, physiological attributes) Framework for understanding diversity of mating systems • Relies on… – Degree males can monopolize – Distribution of resources – Availability of mates • Thus… sexual selection > for the sex that benefits more from increased number of matings (more offspring) – Polygyny = for males • Four types of polygyny that were believed to accompany all snakes – – – – Female defense (mate guarding) Hot-spot Prolonged male searching Explosive mating assemblage Initial research on snake mating systems • Disproportionate Research – done on one species – in a specific climate and location- inaccurate findings – Diverse data for comparative findings unavailable – Poor database/invalid research due to: • Secretive nature of snakes & other difficulties – Contrary to prejudiced info available, polyandry has been found to be the primary, if not universal form of mating system in snakes, not polygyny • Snakes are the first species in which polyandry best describes their mating system Findings on snake mating systems – Contrary to prejudiced info available, Polyandry has been found to be the primary, if not universal form of mating system in snakes, not polygyny • Snakes are the first animal in which polyandry documented – Evidence: males spend more time courting and mating • Choosier (larger more fertile female) • Less reproductive investment • Female multiple mating: found in all species (anaconda not the rare exception anymore) • Males are smaller than females (would be opposite if polygyny) – Males rarely if ever feed during reproductive period • Suffer higher mortality rate QuickTime™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. • Evidence for polyandry in snakes Garter snake – DNA and molecular studies proved several sires in the litters of garter snakes – Even with molecular methods to assess paternity( have found that multiple paternity is the norm for snakes), the word polyandry was still avoided • Although this species still recognized as polygynous • Female Green Anaconda – One female lays in mud or water – 13 males come over • Coil around her and attempt to mate – This mating can last for up to a month • Males may stay with female until the end of her attractive period http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TF7d4jvays Female Snakes • OSR (operational sex ratio) = <1:1 for most snake species – OSR is the ratio of available females to available males • Female snakes: large reproductive investment – Can’t always mate every year • Leads to male-biased OSR – potential for females to mate numerous times Conclusion • Snakes are more likely to exhibit polygynandry (group mating) or polyandry than polygyny – Polgynandry is similar to promiscuity – When looking at their ancestors and sister taxa, evidence for polyandry or serial monogamy – Explains paradoxical behavioral differences • Ex: lack of territoriality or male-based sexual size dimorphism