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The costs of copulating in the dung fly Sepsis cynipsea
Authors:Blanckenhorn  Wolf U; Hosken  David J; Martin  Oliver Y; Reim  Constanze; Teuschl  Yvonne; Ward  Paul I
Institution:Zoologisches Museum, Universität Zürich, Winterthurerstrasse 190, CH-8057 Zürich, Switzerland
Abstract:Finding, assessing, rejecting, and copulating with a mate isassumed to carry fitness costs, particularly for females, thathave to be traded off against fitness benefits of mating suchas increased fecundity, fertility, longevity, or better qualityoffspring. Female dung flies, Sepsis cynipsea (Diptera: Sepsidae),typically attempt to dislodge mounted males harassing themby vigorous shaking. Shaking duration has been shown to reflect both direct and indirect female choice in this species. Thelatter is an expression of the females' general reluctanceto mate due to presumed costs of mating. We investigated thecosts of copulation in the laboratory. Females were randomlyassigned to one of three treatment groups and allowed to copulateeither not at all, once, or twice. The males' armored genitalia injured females internally during copula. Injuries were visibleas sclerotized scars in the female ovipositor, and their occurrenceincreased with mating frequency. Presumably due to these injuries,mated females showed higher mortality. This effect was statisticallyindependent from additional costs of reproduction related tooviposition, as copulation also increased lifetime egg productionand tended to augment oviposition rate (eggs per day), while fertility (proportion of offspring emerged) was unaffected.We thus found high mortality costs of copulating, indicatingsubstantial sexual conflict, which helps explain female reluctanceto mate in this species.
Keywords:female reluctance  genitalia  internal injuries  mating behavior  mating costs  sexual conflict  sexual selection  
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