A behavioral and genetic study of multiple paternity in a polygamous marine invertebrate, Octopus oliveri

PeerJ. 2019 Jun 7:7:e6927. doi: 10.7717/peerj.6927. eCollection 2019.

Abstract

Octopus oliveri is a widespread and common rocky intertidal cephalopod that mates readily in the laboratory, but for which mating behavior has not been reported previously. Four sets of behavioral experiments were recorded wherein three males, small, medium & large in varying order, were introduced to each of six females, for a total of 24 individual females and 12 individual males utilized in the experiments. Video analysis shows that successful mating occurred in each of the mount, reach and beak-to-beak positions. Mating was observed for all males, regardless of size relative to the female, or order of introduction. Females showed preference for the first male to which they were introduced in experimental pairings rather than any specific male trait, and mating time increased significantly with increasing female size. Five novel microsatellite markers were developed and used to test paternity in the eleven broods resulting from these experimental pairings. We found skewed paternity in each brood, with early male precedence and male size being the best predictors of parentage. Multiple paternity was observed in every experimental cross but was estimated to be comparatively low in the field, suggesting that sperm limitation might be common in this species. We saw no evidence of direct sperm competition in Octopus oliveri, but larger males produced significantly more offspring. This study contributes to the growing research on cephalopod mating systems and indicates that octopus mating dynamics might be more variable and complex than thought previously.

Keywords: Cephalopod; Mating behavior; Microsatellite; Polygyny; Reproduction.

Grants and funding

This work was supported primarily by a NOAA National Marine Sanctuaries Program award (MOA grant No. 2005-008/66882) to Robert J. Toonen and two Marie Curie Actions of the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under REA grant agreements 302957 and 600391 (FELLOWSEA: Campus do Mar International Fellowship Program) to Iria Fernandez-Silva. Additional funding was provided to Heather Ylitalo through the University of Hawai‘i, Department of Biology Edmondson Grant, and to Robert J. Toonen through the National Science Foundation (NSF-OA#1416889). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.