When copulating, firebugs (Pyrrhocoris apterus) form tandems for prolonged periods. Half of the copulations of marked individuals in the field lasted longer than 12 h, and some lasted up to 7 days. We found that: (1) females mate usually with several males prior to an oviposition bout, and (2) they store sperm from each mating for a large proportion of their reproductive lives. This causes a high potential for sperm competition to occur within female firebugs. We studied whether prolonged tandem formation is a male adaptation to this situation by testing five alternative hypotheses: (1) mateguarding, (2) sperm-loading, (3) mate monopolization for future clutches, (4) prevention of ejaculate removal, and (5) mechanical sperm displacement. The sperm-utilization pattern was determined using a genetic marker. The second male to mate had a slight but significant fertilization advantage (P-2=0.59). In laboratory experiments, copulation duration varied systematically with the operational sex ratio, from a median duration of 7.3 h with a female-biased sex ratio to 15.3 h with a male-biased sex ratio. Sperm transfer commenced from the beginning of copulation, but the number of sperm in the female spermatheca reached an asymptote after 3-4 h. Smaller males had longer copulation durations than large ones, while there was no relationship between female size and copula duration. From our results, we exclude hypotheses 2-5 as possible explanations for prolonged tandem formation. Rather, males prolong copulations as a form of ejaculate-guarding under high competition with other males. Sperm displacement by prolonged sperm transfer may act in addition to this function, although this was not tested in this study.