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Reassessment of Sex Role-Reversal Hypothesis in the Tropical Butterfly Acraea encedon (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae)
Authors:Sami Saeed M Hassan  Eihab Idris  Michael E N Majerus
Institution:1. Department of Zoology, Faculty of Science, University of Khartoum, P.O. Box 321, 11115, Khartoum, Sudan
2. Department of Biology, Faculty of Science, University of Ha’il, Ha’il, Saudi Arabia
3. Department of Genetics, University of Cambridge, CB2 3EH, Cambridge, UK
Abstract:Species with extremely female-biased sex ratios are expected to show alteration in the normal sex roles, as a response to male scarcity. The tropical butterfly Acraea encedon is known to be infected with a male-killing bacterium of the genus Wolbachia, which has led to severe sex ratio distortion in some populations where more than 95 % of wild females are infected with the male-killer. Thus, the aggregation of female A. encedon at resource-free landmarks has been interpreted as “female lekking” behaviour, a sex role-reversed form of lekking normally seen in males of many animals. For this paper, sites in Uganda where female-leks have previously been reported (in 1998) were revisited and surveyed for both sex ratio and bacterial prevalence, for 3 years (2005–2007). The hypothesis of sex role-reversal in A. encedon was evaluated in light of the field data obtained. The study concluded that the response of host populations to the gradual spread of the male-killer toward fixation occurs initially at the behavioural level, as sex role-reversal, and finally at the demographic level, by succumbing to extinction.
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