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1.
Abstract Reciprocal crosses were performed with Glossina swynnertoni and Glossina morsitans morsitans and with G. swynnertoni and Glossina morsitans centralis , using strains that carried marker genes in all three linkage groups. Glossina swynnertoni males can inseminate, but not fertilize, G.m.morsitans; all other crosses produced some fertile females. Hybridization did not cause sex ratio distortion among F{ flies. Most F and backcross females were fertile, but all F, males were sterile. Sterility among backcross males was also high (99% in BXj, 85% in Bx2, and about 50% in Bx3 to Bx5). Chromosome transmission by hybrid females usually conformed to Mendelian expectations, but genetic recombination was lower than observed in G.m.morsitans. The reduction in fertility among backcross females was not associated with heterozygosity in any linkage group. Sterility among hybrid and backcross males was associated with heterozygosity of sex chromosomes and probably autosomes. The results support the systematic placement of G.swynnertoni closer to G.mxentralis than to G.m.morsitans.  相似文献   

2.
The roles of visual and/or olfactory stimuli in eliciting mating responses from male Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood were examined, using a system for automatically recording the number and duration of mating strikes made towards decoys, under controlled conditions. The results confirm that there is no olfactory component of the female sex recognition pheromone sensed by the male antennae, and the attraction of males to females appears to be visual. The absence of male-male mating strikes was the result of the absence of female sex-pheromone, rather than the presence of a repellent mating deterrent in the male cuticle. Experiments with coloured, artificial, sex-pheromone-dosed, cotton decoys showed that colour had only weak effects on attractiveness and number of encounters with decoys, and that no colour caused significant enhancement of mating responses over those shown to decoy females.  相似文献   

3.
ABSTRACT. The effects of age and hunger on the responses of male Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood and G.pallidipes Austen to freeze-killed female decoys, were examined in the laboratory. In both species, activity, estimated as the total number of interactions between males and decoys, increased with both age and hunger. Interactions were divided into short-stay (<60 s) and long-stay, full copulatory responses. In both species, young, unfed males were significantly less likely to attempt to copulate with a decoy after encounter than were fed males. Among fed males the proportion of interactions that proceeded to full copulatory attempts did not change with increasing age, but decreased consistently with increasing hunger. At all ages and hunger levels, G.pallidipes were more active than G.m.morsitans. However, after encountering a decoy, G.pallidipes were less likely to attempt to copulate than G.m.morsitans. In both species the duration of copulatory attempts did not change with age, but declined with increasing hunger. Copulatory attempts by G.pallidipes were significantly shorter than those of G.m.morsitans. The results are discussed in relation to the behaviour of tsetse in response to control devices such as traps and targets.  相似文献   

4.
ABSTRACT. The sexual behaviour of male Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood (Diptera: Glossinidae) towards decoys dosed with sex phero-mone (15,19,23-trimethylheptatriacontane) is described quantitatively from field observations. The flies responded with a standard behavioural pattern after landing. This involved: first, the perception of pheromone; second, orientation on the decoy and genitalia engagement; and third, a lengthy quiescence corresponding to natural copulation. The probability of a fly leaving a decoy decreased during the sequence and was least in the final 'copulatory' phase, when it remained constant under constant conditions. The initial, rapid rates at which flies left decoys were affected mostly by pheromone dose: the lower the dose, the higher the rate. The final, slow rate of leaving was unaffected by pheromone dose, being most affected by environmental stimuli, especially interference from other flies: at high fly densities, final rates of leaving were high. The results are discussed in the context of improving the potential for using pheromone and chemo-sterilant-dosed decoys for tsetse autosterilization.  相似文献   

5.
6.
ABSTRACT. A rapid decline in receptivity of mated female Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood is shown to depend on both physical and chemical stimuli associated with copulation. Radiolabelling revealed the transfer of substances from the male to the haemolymph of the female during copulation. Implantation of male tissues or their injection as homogenates into virgin females showed the chemical stimulus to come from the male accessory glands. Receptivity decreased in females mated to males with ejaculatory ducts severed or testes removed and also in females which had a glass bead inserted into their uterus and/or the tip of their abdomen covered with wax, suggesting that a physical stimulus inducing refractoriness is provided by distension of the uterus and/or stimulation of their terminalial setae. Exposing virgin females to daily short matings in which no male materials were transferred, confirmed this. Receptivity also declined slowly with age in unexposed virgin females. Transfusion of haemolymph from mated females (up to 11 days old) into virgins did not indicate the existence of a haemolymph-borne ovulation-inducing factor; apparently only physical stimuli from mating are involved in the induction of ovulation, and somehow prime the ovarian tissue so that it responds appropriately later when the egg has matured. Whether the stimulus is transmitted to the ovary neurally or hormonally is unknown.  相似文献   

7.
ABSTRACT. The sexual response of a Glossina morsitans morsitans Westw. male towards a decoy consisting of a dead male dosed with synthetic sex pheromone, was depressed by the presence of the cuticular lipids of the decoy male. However, addition of a C24 paraffin, not normally found on or in the cuticle of male or female G.m.morsitans , to a decoy male from which cuticular lipids were removed had a similar effect. Addition of either the C24 paraffin or an extract of male cuticular lipids to decoy females which possess natural sex pheromone in their cuticles, again depressed the sexual responses of males towards the decoys. The n-hexane solvent used in the application of compounds to decoys, itself depressed responses towards natural pheromone on a dead female at volumes in excess of 100μl, presumably because it mixed the surface waxes which masked the pheromone. Occlusion experiments implied that sex pheromone receptors are present on both the tarsi and tibiae of the male. No evidence was found for the existence of a specific mating deterrent on or in the cuticle of male G.m. morsitans.  相似文献   

8.
ABSTRACT. The spectral sensitivity and flicker fusion frequency (FFF) of wild-type and salmon Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood (Diptera, Glossinidae) were compared electroretinographically (ERG). Spectral sensitivity curves were similar in shape for dark-adapted wild-type and salmon flies, but salmon flies were over 100 times as sensitive as wild-type flies over much of their sensitivity range. Estimation of the spectral absorption curve (from the differences in ERG sensitivities) for the pigment absent from (or present in low concentration in) the salmon eye suggests that the pigment is an ommochrome. FFF at threshold light intensities was similar in wild-type and salmon flies, but at higher light intensity (1.3 °W/cm2) the FFF of salmon flies increased c. 200–300%, due to the capacity of the salmon eye to adapt rapidly to the flicker stimulus. Body weight had little effect upon spectral sensitivity and FFF. Wild-type males were more sensitive to yellow-green light and had higher FFF than did wild-type females. Salmon males and females did not differ in spectral sensitivity, but females had higher FFF (when tested with 520-nm light) than did males. Old wild-type females did not differ from young females in either spectral sensitivity or FFF. However, old salmon females were more sensitive but had lower FFF than young salmon females. Food deprivation reduced spectral sensitivity and FFF in wild-type males but not in salmon males. Irradiation (10.5 krad) reduced spectral sensitivity ( c. 75–375%) and FFF ( c. 30%) in wild-type males. The greatly increased spectral sensitivity and FFF in salmon flies indicate that these flies may behave differently from wild-type flies in the field. Differences in the way spectral sensitivity and flicker discrimination are affected by dark and light adaptation, and by such factors as age and sex, indicate that these measurements are of two independent phenomena.  相似文献   

9.
ABSTRACT. The responses of male Glossina morsitans morsitans West-wood and Glossina pallidipes Austen to freeze-killed females were examined in the laboratory. Analyses were performed using a specially designed, automated, computer-based, recording system. G. pallidipes were more active than G. m. morsitans , interacting with the female decoys twice as often. Interactions with the decoys divided broadly into short-stay (<60 s) and long-stay, full copulatory attempts. For G. m. morsitans 90% of interactions resulted in full copulatory attempts, the mean duration of which was >1 h. For G. pallidipes only 40% of interactions resulted in full copulatory attempts, the mean duration of which was 35 min. The initiation of interactions showed a clear V-shaped activity pattern in G. m. morsitans but in G. pallidipes only a morning peak was observed. In neither species was there a tendency for full copulatory responses to be initiated in any specific period of the diurnal activity pattern. The results indicate that the two species have very different mating systems, and represent an initial step in the quantification of these differences.  相似文献   

10.
The local resource competition (LRC) hypothesis predicts thatwherever philopatric offspring compete for resources with theirmothers, offspring sex ratios should be biased in favor of thedispersing sex. In ants, LRC is typically found in polygynous(multiple queen) species where foundation of new nests occursby budding, which results in a strong population structure anda male-biased population-wide sex ratio. However, under polygyny,the effect of LRC on sex allocation is often blurred by theeffect of lowered relatedness asymmetries among colony members.Moreover, environmental factors, such as the availability ofresources, have also been shown to deeply influence sex ratioin ants. We investigated sex allocation in the monogynous (singlequeen) ant Cataglyphis cursor, a species where colonies reproduceby budding and both male and female sexuals are produced throughparthenogenesis, so that between-colony variations in relatednessasymmetries should be reduced. Our results show that sex allocationin C. cursor is highly male biased both at the colony and populationlevels. Genetic analyses indicate a significant isolation-by-distancein the study population, consistent with limited dispersal offemales. As expected from asexual reproduction, only weak variationsin relatedness asymmetry of workers toward sexual offspringoccur across colonies, and they are not associated with colonysex ratio. Inconsistent with the predictions of the resourceavailability hypothesis, the male bias significantly increaseswith colony size, and investment in males, but not in females,is positively correlated with total investment in sexuals. Overall,our results are consistent with the predictions of the LRC hypothesisto account for sex ratio variation in this species.  相似文献   

11.

Social aggression is a pervasive feature of insect societies. In eusocial Hymenoptera, aggression among females can affect task performance and competition over direct reproduction (egg laying); in most species males participate in social interactions relatively rarely. Males of the independent-founding paper wasp Mischocyttarus mastigophorus are exceptional: they are aggressive toward female nestmates, leading us to explore the function of this unusual behavior. We applied social network analyses to data on M. mastigophorus social aggression to quantify sex differences in giving and receiving social aggression. The network analyses supported the pattern of biased male aggression toward female nestmates; females are relatively rarely aggressive to males. We then asked whether male aggression toward females was biased by females’ relative ovary development. Males were more aggressive toward females with better-developed ovaries, opposite to patterns of aggression among females. Because food brought to the colonies is often monopolized by dominant females, we suggest that males direct aggression toward socially dominant females with better-developed ovaries to obtain food. The implications of biased male aggression for female task performance and physiology are unknown.

  相似文献   

12.
Males of the bruchid beetle Callosobruchus maculatus have spineson their intromittent organs that puncture the female reproductivetract during mating. Females kick their mates during copulation.If females are prevented from kicking the males, copulationslast longer and the injuries females sustain are more severe.We tested whether or not these injuries represent real fitnesscosts that can be mitigated by kicking and also what males gainby inflicting them. Our results show that females do indeedsuffer lowered lifetime fecundity if they are prevented fromkicking. However, we could find no evidence that males gainbenefits through harming their mates. It has been suggestedthat the way females respond to the harm may benefit the malecausing it. Injured females may be less willing to remate toavoid sustaining further injuries, or they may respond by increasingtheir rate of oviposition if they perceive the injuries as athreat to their survival. In our study, however, females thatwere prevented from kicking did not respond by delaying rematingor increasing their rate of oviposition. Furthermore, preventingfemales from kicking during their second copulation did notmake their second mates more successful in sperm competition.This suggests that the spines have evolved for other reasonsthan harming the females, such as serving as an anchor duringcopulation, and that the harm they cause is a side effect ofa male adaptation and is not itself adaptive for either sex.  相似文献   

13.
The nuptial prey gift in the spider Pisaura mirabilis has been suggested to function as a male protection against sexual cannibalismduring courtship and mating. This hypothesis together withtwo alternatives—male mating effort and paternal investment hypotheses—were tested in a laboratory experiment withsexually inexperienced males and females. One group of malesoffered no gift to the female while three groups of males offeredsmall, medium, or large sized gifts, respectively. No malewas cannibalized among 82 trials. Aggression was observed onlyin encounters where a gift was presented. Males without a gift courted females, and 40% of these males managed to copulate,compared to 90% of males offering a gift. The copulation durationwas positively correlated with gift size. In general, the femaleterminated the copulation and ran away with the gift. The proportionof eggs fertilized increased with copulation time. Presenceor size of the nuptial gift did not affect female fecundityor spiderling size significantly. The results refute the hypothesesof sexual cannibalism and paternal investment. The nuptialgift represents a male mating effort; it entices the femaleto copulate, facilitates coupling during copulation, and byprolonging copulation it may increase the amount of sperm transferred.I conclude that the nuptial prey gift in Pisaura mirabilisis maintained by sexual selection.  相似文献   

14.
ABSTRACT. Experiments were performed on male Glossina morsitans morsitans Westw. and female Musca domestica L. to investigate their phototactic responses at long wavelengths. In both species, green light was less attractive than red (relative to a 400 nm standard). In M. domestica this can be adequately explained by an intensity-dependent phototactic reversal at wavelengths above 500 nm; red light could be matched in attractiveness by a low intensity green light, implying that no true red-green discriminating ability exists, but that red is perceived as a dim green. Although a partial phototactic reversal was also observed in G. m. morsitans at 525–575 nm, no tested intensity of green matched red in attractiveness. It appears therefore that G. m. morsitans may be an unusual dipteran in possessing a method of discriminating red and green light independently of intensity. Both species also resolved near-UV from green.  相似文献   

15.
ABSTRACT. Post-feed buzzing in Glossina morsitans morsitans Westw. causes a rise in thoracic temperature relative to the length of the buzz. As lift is proportional to the square of wing-beat frequency, which increases with temperature up to 32°C, buzzing results in an increase in the lift which the fly can produce. Heat generated by buzzing, in combination with the heat received from the host at the time of feeding, may well allow the fly to maximize lift generated in the immediate post-feeding period. Buzzing flies excrete excess water from the meal more rapidly than non-buzzing flies. It is argued that this is due to a rise in abdominal temperature. Maximized lift in the immediate post-feeding period and the rapid elimination of water from the very large blood meals taken by these flies may be expected to have strong selective advantages for the flies.  相似文献   

16.
Male Glossina sexually sterilized by gamma-irradiation are as efficient vectors of trypanosomiasis as fertile males. An attempt was made, using isometamidium chloride (Samorin), to interfere with the cyclical development of trypanosomes in sterile males, destined for use in the sterile insect release (SIR) method of tsetse eradication. The infection rate with mature Trypanosoma congolense Broden was effectively reduced in sterile male Glossina morsitans centralis Machado, when the flies were fed on an infected goat 2 days after they were fed as tenerals on an in vitro bloodmeal containing 8 micrograms Samorin/ml blood. The infection rates with mature T.vivax Ziemann and T.brucei brucei Plimmer & Bradford were completely suppressed at this drug dose. Whensterile teneral males were fed on a bloodmeal containing 12 micrograms/ml Samorin and given the infected bloodmeal 10 days later, infections by mature T.vivax, T.congolense and T.b.brucei were completely suppressed. Hence in the management of a tsetse eradication programme utilizing the SIR method, it is recommended that the sterile teneral male tsetse should, prior to release, be given a bloodmeal containing Samorin at 12-15 micrograms/ml blood. This will effectively suppress future disease transmission.  相似文献   

17.
Sex allocation theory predicts that mothers in good conditionshould bias their brood sex ratio in response to the differentialbenefits obtained from increased maternal expenditure in sonsand daughters. Although there is well-documented variationof offspring sex ratios in several bird species according tomaternal condition, the assumption that maternal condition has different fitness consequences for male and for female offspringremains unclear. The blue-footed booby (Sula nebouxii) is asexually size-dimorphic seabird, with females approximately31% heavier than males. It has been reported that the sex ratiois male biased in years with poor feeding conditions, whichsuggests that either females adjust their sex ratio in accordancewith their condition or that they suffer differential brood mortality before their sex can be determined. In this studyI tested whether the condition of mothers affected their daughters'fitness more than their sons' fitness. I manipulated maternalinvestment by trimming the flight feathers and thereby handicappingfemales during the chick-rearing period. Adult females in thehandicapped group had a poorer physical condition at end ofchick growth, as measured by mass and by the residuals of masson wing length compared to control birds. Female chicks wereaffected by the handicapping experiment, showing a lower massand shorter wing length (reduced approximately 8% in both measures)than controls. However, this effect was not found in male chicks.Hatching sex ratios were also related to female body conditionat hatching. The brood sex ratio of females in poor conditionwas male biased but was female biased for females in good condition.Overall, these results suggest that the variation in the sexratio in blue-footed boobies is an adaptive response to thedisadvantage daughters face from being reared under poor conditions.  相似文献   

18.
ABSTRACT. The copulatory behaviour of Glossina morsitans morsitans West. and G.austeni Newst. was analysed by filming. After a male and female engaged genitalia, the male performed a repertoire of five actions for 3–4 min: (1) 'rubbing' his metathoracic, tibiotarsal joint against the region of genital contact; (2) 'stroking' or hitting the female's head and thorax with his meso- and metathoracic legs; (3) 'wing flick' by moving his mesothoracic legs in a rowing motion whilst at the same time vibrating the wings as in normal flight; (4) 'wing vibration' with the wings vibrated in the closed position; (5) 'wings out' in which the wings are moved out to the flying position without any observable vibration. Each action was repeated many times, to give variable individual sequences, but declined in frequency exponentially over the first 3–4 min in copulo. The two species differed in the frequency of acts. Shortly before separation, a few hours later, actions 1 and 2 reappeared. Receptive females exhibited little overt behaviour except in the maintenance of a passive stance. Refractory females rejected a mating attempt by flexing the abdomen ventrally, vibrating their wings in the closed position, and pushing the male with meso- and metathoracic legs. The significance and possible functions of male behaviour are discussed in relation to mating in Glossina and other Diptera.  相似文献   

19.
Schistosoma mansoni: male-biased sex ratios in snails and mice   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Adult sex ratios of Schistosoma mansoni, in mice, were shown to be biased toward males (3:1) despite the finding that sex ratios of miracidia were 50:50. The adult male bias was caused by greater male infectivity of miracidia for snails and cercariae for mice. A significantly higher percentage of male miracidia developed to cercarial production in unimiracidial infections (57 male, 34 female), and a significantly higher percentage of male cercariae developed to adulthood in mice (143 male, 79 female worms resulted from 900 male and 900 female cercariae). No significant differences were found between male and female parasites for longevity of miracidia (both sexes, 10 hr) and cercariae (males 21.3 +/- 5.75 hr, females 25.0 +/- 7.02 hr), prepatent periods in snail hosts (male 34 +/- 2.92 days, females 33 +/- 2.36 days), longevity of snail infections (males 96.6 +/- 25.15 days, females 115.2 +/- 82.43 days), and the numbers of cercariae produced per snail lifetime (males 30,751.44 +/- 18,064.33, females 34,083.00 +/- 33,732.82). Present results provide a better understanding of the life cycle of S. mansoni, are of theoretical significance for theories of biased sex ratios (which at present cannot account for the male-biased ratio of S. mansoni), and also suggest that schistosomiasis transmission models assuming a 50:50 sex ratio at all stages of the life cycle should be reassessed.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract:  The effect of diamondback moth (DBM), Plutella xylostella (Lep., Plutellidae) male and female multiple mating on fecundity, fertility, and longevity was studied. Males could mate for five times with virgin females during scotophase. The successful copulation rates, fecundity of female, and longevity of both females and males decreased when male mating times increased, whereas copulation duration increased. Correlation coefficient between copulation duration and male mating times was significant ( r  = 0.7358, P = 0.0001, spearman rank-order correlation). There were linear relationships between mating history of males and longevities of males and females, and regression relationships between them were significant. Mated females had similar daily reproductive pattern, which laid the most eggs on the first day after mating in spite of their mates' mating history. Virgin females laid some infertile eggs before they died. Most of the females mated once during their lifespan but 19.9% of females mated twice when one female kept with one male during scotophase. There were no significant differences in the fecundity, fertility and longevity between the single- and twice-mated females. Correlation coefficient between copulation duration and female mating times was not significant ( r  = 0.0860, P = 0.8575). Results suggested that DBM females may be monandrous. Multiple mating did not increase male or female mating fitness.  相似文献   

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