A secondary sex trait under construction: age- and nutrition-related salivary gland development in a scorpionfly (Insecta: Mecoptera) |
| |
Authors: | S. Engels K. P. Sauer |
| |
Affiliation: | Institut für Evolutionsbiologie und Ökologie der Rheinischen Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, Germany |
| |
Abstract: | Males of Panorpa vulgaris Imhoff and Labram, 1836 (Insecta: Mecoptera) can apply three alternative mating tactics to gain access to female mating partners: (1) without nuptial feeding, (2) providing females with a dead arthropod or (3) producing salivary masses. Providing females with salivary masses during copulation leads to the highest reproductive success, as it results in longer mating durations relative to the other tactics. While the number of sperm transferred correlates with the duration of copulation, the sperm of different males are used according to the fair raffle model. Therefore, salivary mass production is an important fitness determining factor for males. In order to provide females with salivary masses, males must first produce and store saliva secretion inside their salivary glands. The present study was concerned with the development of male salivary glands (= production of saliva) in the course of time after adult emergence. We can show that saliva production did not start before adult emergence, that the state of development of salivary glands was affected by larval nutrition as well as by adult nutrition and, moreover, by age. Older individuals had developed glands of greater mass than had younger animals. After receiving a one‐time feeding immediately after eclosion salivary gland mass increased, while body mass decreased with age. Therefore, male P. vulgaris were able to enlarge the amount of their mating resources (= saliva) independently from external nutritional supply (after the initial feeding) and at the expense of losing weight. Possible reasons and functional explanations are discussed. |
| |
Keywords: | Food stress mating resources Panorpa physiology sexual selection |
|
|