“…Numerous male reproductive proteins show elevated rates of sequence evolution [e.g., Torgerson et al, 2002;Clark and Swanson, 2005;Haerty et al, 2007]. The probable driving force behind is commonly seen in the various forms of postcopulatory sexual selection, including sperm competition [e.g., Lüke et al, 2014;Ramm et al, 2014;Schumacher et al, 2014], cryptic female choice [Gasparini and Pilastro, 2011;Løvlie et al, 2013], and sexual conflict Sirot et al, 2014]. Prominent examples of male reproductive genes under postcopulatory sexual selection are primate and rodent protamines and semenogelins, whereby the first replace histones in the sperm head [Wyckoff et al, 2000;Ramm et al, 2008;Lüke et al, 2014] and the latter polymerize to a copulation plug in the female genital tract [Jensen-Seaman and Li, 2003;Dorus et al, 2004;Ramm et al, 2008].…”