Ejaculate disruption in two species of voles (Microtus): On the PEI matching law. |
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Authors: | Dewsbury, Donald A. Bauer, Stuart M. Pierce, John D. Shapiro, Lawrence E. Taylor, Stephen A. |
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Abstract: | Male prairie and montane voles (Microtus ochrogaster and M. montanus) were permitted 5 thrusts, without ejaculation, with a female at variable times after a 1st male ejaculated. In both prairie and montane voles, there were fewer sperm, in relation to control conditions, in the female's tract 1 hr after ejaculation if the female received thrusts immediately or 15 min after the ejaculate. There was no such effect after a 50-min delay. There was no significant decrease in litter production in prairie voles caused by thrusts delivered either immediately or after a 15-min delay. Sperm transport in these species is susceptible to disruption for a longer period than in deer mice or rats. The proposal that the postejaculatory interval (PEI) protects a male from disrupting its own sperm transport (the PEI matching law) appears not to hold for these species. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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