Authors
Nikos T Papadopoulos, Pablo Liedo, Hans-Georg Müller, Jane-Ling Wang, Freerk Molleman, James R Carey
Publication date
2010/3/1
Journal
Journal of Insect Physiology
Volume
56
Issue
3
Pages
283-287
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
In polygynous insect species, male reproductive success is directly related to lifetime mating success. However, the costs for males of sexual activities such as courting, signaling, and mating are largely unknown. We studied the cost of sexual activities in male Mediterranean fruit flies, Ceratitis capitata (Tephritidae), a polygynous lekking species, by keeping cohorts of individual male flies under relaxed crowding conditions in the laboratory. We used 5 cohorts among which individuals differed in their opportunities to interact with con-specifics and recorded life span, and in one treatment, mating rate. We found that males kept singly lived more than twice as long as males that interacted intensively with mature virgin females, while male–male interactions caused a smaller reduction in longevity. Because longevity of males that could court but not mate was not significantly different from those that could court and mate …
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