Why Too High a Sex Drive Puts off These Female Fish – and What They Do About It

Poeciliids, a group of fish to which the eastern mosquitofish belong, spend more time seeking sex than any other creature in the vertebrate world.

A male mosquitofish. Credit: NOZO/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0

Animals do the most amazing things. Read about them in this series by Janaki Lenin.

Males of many species contribute only sperm to the next generation. They don’t take the trouble or time to incubate eggs or rear offspring. When their investment is so little, they are free to go forth and multiply. Intense sexual activity makes more babies. Their sons, in turn, inherit their fathers’ sexual prowess and make successful fathers. Despite all the obvious advantages of not caring for offspring, males don’t always churn out young ones.

Low rank, high-stakes competition and parasites are some factors that hold males back from realising their full potential. Even when nothing prevents them from having sex, some males, like mosquitofish, seem uninterested.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Eastern mosquitofish (Gambusia holbrooki) is one of the two most abundant and widespread freshwater fish in the world. A native of eastern US, it was introduced throughout the tropics to control mosquito larvae. It belongs to a group called poeciliids that have sex to produce live young. Males modified their anal fins into a penis-like organ called gonopodium. Females of most other fish species lay their eggs over which males squirm to fertilise with their sperm.

The light-coloured four-centimetre-long male mosquitofish doesn’t court and cajole his larger mates. Instead, he harasses any female, by approaching her from behind and touching her genital pore with his snout. Fish biologists call this behaviour ‘nipping’. Or he aligns himself below her and thrusts his gonopodium into her pore. Poeciliids spend more time seeking sex than any other creature in the vertebrate world. But not all male mosquitofish energetically pursue females. Some seem to be less horny. The more fecund males ought to swamp the population, outnumbering those less exploitative of mating opportunities. That isn’t the case.

“The starting point for our studies was the question why males in some animal species differ pronouncedly and consistently in their sexual activity levels even when they are exposed to identical environmental conditions and don’t need to compete,” Carolin Sommer-Trembo, a doctoral student at Germany’s J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt, said in a press release. “We wanted to know how this variation in male behavioural types is maintained, although selection ought to oust males which display low or average levels of sexual activity.”

Sommer-Trembo and her colleagues from Northern A&F University, People’s Republic of China, Germany’s J.W. Goethe University Frankfurt and Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries sought answers to the question – What keeps males with low sex drive in the gene pool?

She created a video animation of a male nipping a female with different levels of persistence: low, medium, and high.

“Male mosquitofish do not only differ in their sexual activity but also in other traits like size, body shape, colouration, and even personality,” Sommer-Trembo told The Wire. “To be sure that females only evaluated male sexual activity and none of the other traits, we decided to use computer animations instead of live males. Computer animations have many advantages and you can do very exact behavioural studies using them. However, they are artificial. Fortunately, we already worked with similar animations before and knew that our test fish respond to them.”

Females pay a high price for sex. They go hungry when pursued by males intent on sex. The gonopodium is armed with claws to hold on to females. These can injure the interior walls of the females’ genital pores.

Sommer-Trembo tested the females to see which of the three intensities of sexual ardour they found attractive. The experienced females were alone when they watched the animation or in a shoal with other females. The researchers tested sexually naive lone females. Considering the price the females pay, one would expect them to shy away from males. But they weren’t prudish.

When they were alone in the aquarium, watching the animated highly libidinous male harass the virtual female, experienced females stayed away from the screen. Instead, they were more attracted to ones with medium and low sex drives.

Besides suffering hunger and injuries, sex can kill females. Since they were larger than the males, they would make a tempting snack for a predator, especially when they are alone. This is probably why lone females evaded oversexed males.

The female preference for medium lust didn’t change when they were in a group. What changed, however, was their willingness to consort with the male with the most ardour as long as their friends were in the vicinity.