Ejaculate Cost and Male Choice

Abstract
According to much evolutionary thinking, males of promiscuous species are able to produce quantities of sperm that are virtually unlimited and should be selected to mate indiscriminately with all available females. However, sperm are generally delivered in batches (ejaculates or spermatophores) that may include many millions of gametes. Males are limited with respect to the number of ejaculates they can deliver and the time required to restore depleted reserves. Because ejaculates are a limited resource, prudence would be expected in the allocation of ejaculates to females. Among the forces acting to limit the number of females with which a promiscuous male mates are high pregnancy initiation requirements, sperm competition, female choice and control, and the costs and risks of searching. Optimal strategies for ejaculate allocation will vary with the operational sex ratio. Males can and do discriminate among females as potential mating partners. The problems of limited ejaculatory capacity and male choice merit greater attention in both theory and in empirical research.