Hemipenis

An everted hemipenis of a North American rattlesnake (Crotalus adamanteus).

A hemipenis (plural hemipenes) is one of a pair of intromittent organs of male squamates (snakes, lizards and worm lizards).[1][2] Hemipenes are usually held inverted, within the body, and are everted for reproduction via erectile tissue, much like that in the human penis.[3] Only one is used at a time, and evidence indicates males alternate use between copulations as a behavioral means of increasing sperm transfer when the interval between copulations is relatively brief.[4]

The hemipenis itself has a variety of shapes, depending on species. Often, the hemipenis bears spines or hooks, in order to anchor the male within the female. Some species even have forked hemipenes (each hemipenis has two tips). Sexual conflict over copulation duration may have shaped the evolution of hemipenis morphology, favoring more elaborate organs in species in which a long duration of copulation is especially beneficial to males, despite the associated costs to females.[5] Because they are everted and inverted, hemipenes do not have a completely enclosed channel for the conduction of sperm, but rather a seminal groove which seals as the erectile tissue expands.

The word hemipenis (plural "hemipenes") comes from the word "hemi", meaning half, and "penis".

See also

Hemipenes on the western diamondback rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox).

Notes

  1. "Hemipenes".
  2. Holmes MM, Putz O, Crews D, Wade J (April 2005). "Normally occurring intersexuality and testosterone induced plasticity in the copulatory system of adult leopard geckos". Horm Behav 47 (4): 439–45. doi:10.1016/j.yhbeh.2004.11.020. PMID 15777809.
  3. "Iguana Anatomy".
  4. Tokarz, R. and Slowinski,J.Alternation of hemipenis use as a behavioural means of increasing spermtransfer in the lizard Anolis sagrei. AnimalBehaviour. 40: 374–379. 1990.
  5. KING, RICHARD B.; JADIN, ROBERT C.; GRUE, MICHAEL; WALLEY, HARLAN D. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. Sep2009, Vol. 98 Issue 1, p110-120. 11p.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, June 08, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.