Flinders University: Sizing up rodent mating evolution

A new study has found the distribution of females in 33 species of Australian rodents affects the evolution of testes size of males in these social species.

The research, just published in Biology Letters, confirms that female availability influences the strength of sperm competition in these rodent species, according to evolutionary biology researchers from the University of Western Australia (UWA), Flinders University and Columbia University, US.

Insights into reproduction and male fertility will help understand and support conservation of Australia’s rodent species threatened by introduced predators, habitat clearance and degradation, and climate change, says lead author Dr Renée Firman, ARC Future Fellow from UWA’s Centre for Evolutionary Biology.

“We used phylogenetic analyses on 33 species of rodents to understand the link between the spatial and temporal distribution of females and sperm competition, or essentially male-male competition after mating,” she says.

“We found that males of these social species had smaller testes compared to solitary species, suggesting that dominance hierarchies among social males lead to reduced levels of sperm competition.”

The study also found that testes size increased with decreasing mating season length, indicating that the “temporal synchrony of female receptivity predicts the level of sperm competition in Australian rodents,” Dr Firman adds.


The results suggest that males may be effective in monopolising reproduction within social groups, which leads to reduced levels of sperm competition relative to non-social species where free-ranging females cannot be controlled.

“Overall, our results show that patterns of female distribution, in both space and time, can influence the strength of post-mating sexual selection among species,” researchers say.

Ultimately, patterns of female distribution will affect the strength of sperm competition by dictating the extent to which males are able to prevent female remating.

“This study helps our understanding of how the spatial and temporal distribution of mating opportunities have shaped the evolution of sperm competition,” says Flinders University Lecturer in Terrestrial Ecology Dr Bruno Buzatto.