Mammalian sperm thermotaxis was, hitherto, demonstrated in three species: humans, rabbits, and mice. This was done by two methods. One involved a
Zigmond chamber, modified to make the temperature in each well separately controllable and measurable. A linear temperature gradient was established between the wells and the swimming of spermatozoa in this gradient was analyzed. A small fraction of the spermatozoa (at the order of ~10%), shown to be the
capacitated cells, biased their swimming direction according to the gradient, moving towards the warmer temperature.- or three to the current (rather than to the temperature gradient per se). Another concern was that the temperature could have changed the local pH of the
buffer solution in which the spermatozoa are suspended. This could generate a pH gradient along the temperature gradient, and the spermatozoa might have responded to the formed pH gradient by chemotaxis. However, careful experimental examinations of all these possibilities with proper controls demonstrated that the measured responses to temperature are true thermotactic responses and that they are not a reflection of any other temperature-sensitive process, including rheotaxis and chemotaxis. == Behavioral mechanism of mammalian sperm thermotaxis ==