Abstract When females mate with multiple males, ejaculates from different partners compete within the female reproductive tract. Males gain a competitive advantage by transferring seminal fluid proteins (Sfps) that manipulate female post-mating responses, such as reducing female propensity to remate. But in monandrous species, where females typically mate only once, post-mating sexual selection is absent, raising questions about the complexity and identity of Sfps in monandrous seminal proteomes
The seminal proteome of a monandrous fly, Drosophila subobscura
Rebecca Dean·Stuart Wigby·Claire Eyers·Kawinnat Sue-ob·Rudi Verspoor·Jolanta Tanianis-Hughes·Tom A. R. Price·Margaret Hughes·Stephen F. Goodwin·Steve Paterson·Andrew R. Jones·Irem Sepil·Stuart Hesketh
