Characterization of sperm and implications for male fertility in the last of the Rhynchocephalians

Author:

Lamar Sarah K12ORCID,Nelson Nicola J13,Ormsby Diane K1

Affiliation:

1. Victoria University of Wellington School of Biological Sciences, , Level 2 Te Toki a Rata Building, Wellington 6012, New Zealand

2. Victoria University of Wellington Centre for Biodiversity and Restoration Ecology, , Level 2 Te Toki a Rata Building, Wellington 6012, New Zealand

3. Victoria University of Wellington Centre for Biodiversity and Restoration Ecology, , Level 2 Te Toki a Rata Building, New Zealand

Abstract

AbstractManaging a species of conservation concern can be best achieved when there is information on the reproductive physiology of both sexes available; however, many species lack this critical, baseline information. One such species, the tuatara (Sphenodon punctatus), is the last surviving member of one of the four reptile orders (Rhynchocephalia) and is the only reptile known to lack a male intromittent organ. Culturally and evolutionarily significant, the conservation of this species is a global priority for the maintenance of biodiversity. In light of this, we characterized the morphology, viability and swim speed of mature tuatara sperm for the first time. We found that tuatara sperm are filiform and bear the remarkably conserved three-part sperm structure seen across the animal kingdom. Tuatara sperm are long (mean total length 166 μm), with an approximate head:midpiece:tail ratio of 15:1:17. While tuatara sperm are capable of high levels of within-mating viability (94.53%), the mean viability across all samples was 58.80%. Finally, tuatara sperm had a mean curvilinear velocity swim speed (μ × s − 1) of 82.28. At the population level, there were no differences in viability or mean swim speed between sperm collected from a male’s first mating of a season and repeat matings; however, the maximum sperm swim speed increased in observed repeated matings relative to first matings. Interestingly, faster sperm samples had shorter midpieces, but had greater viability and longer head and tail sections. This work expands our understanding of male reproductive characteristics and their variation to a new order, provides wild references for the assessment of captive individuals, lays the groundwork for potential assisted reproductive techniques and highlights variation in male reproductive potential as an important factor for consideration in future conservation programs for this unique species.

Funder

Doctoral Scholarship through Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington

Te Herenga Waka–Victoria University of Wellington and a Herpetological Research Grant from the Society for Research on Amphibians and Reptiles in New Zealand

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecological Modeling,Physiology

Reference62 articles.

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