Monday, April 2, 2012

She-male and Male: Tales from the Mating Ball


            The red-sided garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis) demonstrates an unusual reproductive behavior involving multiple morphs of the animal’s male form. In order for either male morph to elicit mating behavior from the female, it must display several different behaviors of its own. Upon encountering the female, the male will press his chin into her dorsal skin and flick its tongue rapidly. He will then undulate his body along the female. If the female is sexually receptive, intromission will occur. This behavior commonly occurs at a ratio of many males to one female in a mating ball.


            Female garter snakes also play a role in sexual receptivity. Females produce a pheromone that delivers chemical cues to the male garter snake’s vomeronasal organ (VNO). Previous studies suggest that the male’s tongue flicking delivers the compound to the VNO.

            The present study aimed at identifying this compound through a bioassay. Chemical extracts were presented on paper towels to courting males and their responses were recorded. Female pheromones were obtained and fractionated and the active compounds were presented to the males one at a time. The pheromone was identified as methyl keytone, a nonvolatile contact pheromone.


            When attempting to mate, normal males typically ignore other normal males because the normal morph does not produce the same quantity of methyl keytone as the female. The normal male also produces a chemical called squalene. An interesting component of the red-sided garter’s pheromone system is perhaps in the alternate male morph, referred to in the literature as the “she-male.” The she-male is indistinguishable from the normal male morph and elicits mating behavior from the normal male. The she-male is a male mimic of the female and has comparable levels of methyl keytone to the female and does not produce any squalene.

            The normal male is sexually receptive to the she-male and will attempt to mate with the she-male morph in the same way that it does the female. When in the mating ball, the she-male will induce some of the normal males to move away from the female. The normal males begin their unproductive courting of the she-male and the she-male begins courting the female.

            Previous research suggests that the she-male is more than twice as successful at copulating with the female as the normal male. The she-male also contains about three times as much testosterone as the normal male. We typically think of testosterone as masculine and a characteristic that would be unattractive to the normal male morph. The article hypothesizes that although there is a higher level of testosterone in the she-male, this testosterone is converted by aromatase into estrogen in the skin, resulting in mating behavior from the normal male.


4 comments:

To Love What is Mortal said...

Very interesting, isn't it? Sneaky snakes, indeed. Cool post!

Allison Welch said...

Wow! So is there any advantage to being a 'regular' male in this population?

Anonymous said...

The she-male has the chemosensory advantage but the normal male occurs at a higher frequency than the she-male in the population. So even though the she-male can trick a number of normal males away from courting the female, it still has to compete with anywhere from 10-100 other snakes in the mating ball.

I also don't know how a she-male is affected by other she-males in the mating ball either. I'm pretty sure there isn't even any data on that. Someone presented a few papers in class on this species that suggested a size dimorphism between the male and female but not the male and she-male. Apparently males prefer larger females and that might come into play when a smaller she-male is attempting to distract a number of normal males who are going after a larger female.

And there's another hypothesis that the she-male chemosensory cue is not to distract the normal male in the mating ball. Instead it is to attract the normal male to ball up around the she-male after hibernation and warm the she-male up. Then the she-male has a temperature advantage that becomes a movement advantage over the normal male so the she-male can rapidly approach the female and outrun the normal male. I don't particularly believe that one though.

Allison Welch said...

Very cool (or should I say, warm)! Thanks for the additional info, Zach!