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Copulation Is Not a Prerequisite to Male Reception of Eggs in the Golden Egg Bug Phyllomorpha laciniata (Coreidae; Heteroptera)
Authors:M Miettinen  A Kaitala
Institution:(1) Department of Zoology, University of Stockholm, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;(2) Department of Biology, University of Oulu, Box 3000, Fin-90401 Oulu, Finland
Abstract:Females of the golden egg bug, Phyllomorpha laciniata, lay eggs on the backs of conspecifics. Male response to female oviposition attempts is either passive or resistant. Passive males remain still during oviposition, while resistant males move repeatedly and thereby delay or avoid being encumbered. We investigated how previous mating experience affected male acceptance of eggs. Males from two Spanish populations, from Andalusia and Catalonia, were allowed to mate with single females repeatedly. These experimental pairs were then presented with either a single, nonmating male or a pair in copula. We expected mating partners to resist oviposition attempts less strongly than nonmating males but no differences were detected. However, there was a significant difference in behavior exhibited by males from the two populations; males from Catalonia were relatively passive but males from Andalusia routinely resisted encumbrance. Predation pressure and the availability of receptive females may explain the observed differences between the populations.
Keywords:egg carrying  golden egg bug  Phyllomorpha laciniata  paternity assurance  population differences  intraspecific parasitism
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