Abstract
The percentage of sperm motility (92-100%), spermatozoan velocity (112-163μm·s-1) and control hatching rates (83-96%) were evaluated for each of six gold and five green male common carp (Cyprinus carpio). In all 30 possible paired combinations of sperm-competition tests, hatching rates of 90-97% were achieved. The mean percentage of offspring sired was strongly influenced by the male used (P < 0.001, R2 = 0.91). The best male sired an average of 88% of the offspring in its competition tests, and the worst male sired only 5%. Spermatozoan-quality parameters could explain only part of the variation in male competitive ability. The male effects alone explained 91.4% of the observed variance, consisting of 17.1 % explained by spermatozoan motility and 32.5% by control hatching rates in single fertilizations. Undetermined male effects explained 41.8%. The velocity of spermatozoa had no effect on the outcome of sperm competition. Neither was there any link between spermatozoan velocity and hatching rate in a control hatching test, whereas there was an effect of motility on hatching rate in this same test. © 2005 Society for Reproduction and Fertility.
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CITATION STYLE
Linhart, O., Rodina, M., Gela, D., Kocour, M., & Vandeputte, M. (2005). Spermatozoal competition in common carp (Cyprinus carpio): What is the primary determinant of competition success? Reproduction, 130(5), 705–711. https://doi.org/10.1530/rep.1.00541
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