Pairing Patterns in Japanese Beetles (Popillia japonica Newman): Effects of Sex Ratio and Time of Day |
| |
Authors: | Paul V. Switzer Kara Escajeda Kipp C. Kruse |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Department of Biological Sciences, Eastern Illinois University, 600 Lincoln Avenue, Charleston, Illinois, 61920 |
| |
Abstract: | Size-related patterns between unpaired and paired individuals and between males and females of a given pair give clues about both a species' sexual behavior and the environmental factors affecting its sexual behavior. We studied the mating patterns of Japanese beetles (Popillia japonica) in east–central Illinois. The frequency of male–female pairs varied significantly among days and within a day, with pairs being significantly more common in the morning and the evening. The sex ratio on the food plants was significantly male biased, but although the sex ratio fluctuated among days and among time periods, the variation in the frequency of mating pairs was not explained by variation in the sex ratio. We found no assortative pairing with respect to size, but sizes of paired and unpaired individuals did differ. Paired females were larger than unpaired females at all time periods. In contrast, paired males were larger at 0700 and smaller at 1000, and little difference existed at other times of the day. The size of males and females, sex ratio, and pairing frequency also differed among days. Much of this variation in size and pairing frequency was related to a seasonal effect: later in the summer, beetles of both sexes were smaller and pairs were less common. Interestingly, pairs were also less frequent on days with higher average temperatures. This between-day variation in pairing, in combination with the within-day pairing differences, suggests that the temperature may alter the cost, and hence likelihood, of pairing in this species. |
| |
Keywords: | assortative mating Japanese beetle sex ratio sexual behavior weather |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|