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Glowing fly sperm yields results | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
US researchers using genetically engineered fruit flies with glowing sperm have tracked the seed's progress inside the female, in real time. | |
By making the fly's sperm glow green or red, researchers from Syracuse University are able to see previously unobservable events unfold. | |
Competition between sperm is a key component of sexual selection. | |
The researchers hope their findings will also offer new insights into human reproductive biology. | |
'Knocked us out' | 'Knocked us out' |
In nature, monogamy is often the exception, promiscuity usually the rule, the BBC's Matt McGrath reports. | |
But whenever a female of any species mates with more than one male there is a battle between the sperm of the potential fathers as they attempt to fertilise the eggs. | |
Scientists regard this type of sexual selection as a very important force for evolutionary change. | |
The trick of making fly sperm glow to see how they compete was first employed in 1999, by scientists from the University of Chicago. | |
Now the Syracuse University researchers have gone one better, by watching the sperm race in real time, the journal Science reports. | |
Prof Scott Pitnick says it was a jaw-dropping moment when he saw the multicoloured sperm through the microscope for the first time. | |
"It turns out that they [the sperm] are constantly on the move within the female's specialised sperm-storage organs and exhibit surprisingly complex behaviour," Prof Pitnick said. | |
"It far exceeds our expectations, in that we can essentially track the fate of every sperm the female receives. | |
"It's seeing all the novel observations, the complexity of what sperm do inside the female reproductive tract that no-one has ever been able to observe before. That's really knocked us out." | "It's seeing all the novel observations, the complexity of what sperm do inside the female reproductive tract that no-one has ever been able to observe before. That's really knocked us out." |
Prof Pitnick and his colleagues say they have created glowing sperm for other species. | |
They believe their technique could be used to understand not just issues of evolution but to potentially solve problems of fertility in humans. |
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