| Literature DB >> 35135315 |
Michal Polak1, Shane F McEvey2.
Abstract
Traumatic insemination (TI) is a rare reproductive behaviour characterized by the transfer of sperm to the female via puncture wounds inflicted across her body wall. Here, we challenge the claim made by Kamimura (Kamimura 2007 Biol. Lett. 3, 401-404. (doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0192)) that males of species of the Drosophila bipectinata complex use a pair of claw-like processes (claws) to traumatically inseminate females: the claws are purported to puncture the female body wall and genital tract, and to inject sperm through the wounds into the lumen of her genital tract, bypassing the vaginal opening. This supposed case of TI is widely cited and featured in prominent subject reviews. We examined high-resolution scanning electron micrographs of the claws and failed to discover any obvious 'groove' for sperm transport. We demonstrated that sperm occurred in the female reproductive tract as a single-integrated unit, inconsistent with the claim that sperm are injected via paired processes. Laser ablation of the sharp terminal ends of the claws failed to inhibit insemination. We showed that the aedeagus in the complex delivers sperm through the vaginal opening, as in other Drosophila. The results refute the claim of TI in the Drosophila bipectinata species complex.Entities:
Keywords: Drosophila bipectinata species complex; aedeagal lateral processes; anchoring; genital claws; refutation; traumatic insemination hypothesis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35135315 PMCID: PMC8826136 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2021.0625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703
Figure 1Light microscope images of reproductive structures of the bipectinata complex. (a) Hypandrium inside male body. (b,c) Drawing and digital image of posterior end of hypandrium, showing the aedeagal lateral processes (a, aed lat proc, claws) and the postgonal sheath (e, pg sh). Ridges and thickened processes (b, c, d, f) of the sheath are evident. (d,e) Aedeagal lateral processes and postgonal sheath in two phallapodeme orientations; articulation of the aedeagal lateral process with phallapodeme arrowed in (d). (f,g) Extruded aedeagus of a male D. bipectinata, arising from between the bases of the claws, showing sperm emanating from its tip. (h,i) Sperm seeping from the female gonopore (sperm teased further out arrowed in (i)).
Figure 2SEMs of the aedeagal lateral processes (aed lat proc) of the bipectinata complex. (a) Ventral surface of hypandrium with the pair of aedeagal lateral processes, cloaked in the postgonal sheath (pg sh). (b,c) Smooth, seamless ventral surfaces of the claws. Pregonite (pregt) with apical sensilla. (d) Ventral and lateral surfaces of the aedeagal lateral processes. Dehydration during scanning electron microscopy preparation likely accounts for the shallow medial depressions in (c) and (d). (e) Dorsal surface of an aedeagal lateral process with depression at its tip, possibly an abrasion. (f) Reticulated mat of tissue between the bases of the claws, likely to be the collapsed aedeagus. (g,h) Examples of the aedeagal lateral processes experimentally blunted (arrowed) using a surgical laser. Both tip-ablated processes visible in (h).