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Effect of morph types, body size and prior residence on food-site holding by males of the male-dimorphic stag beetle Prosopocoilus inclinatus (Coleoptera: Lucanidae)
Authors:Akio Inoue  Eisuke Hasegawa
Affiliation:1. Laboratory of Animal Ecology, Department of Ecology and Systematics, Graduate School of Agriculture, Hokkaido University, Kita-ku, Sapporo, 060-8589, Japan
Abstract:Mate-securing tactics of small males in male-polymorphic species exhibiting male–male combat is an important issue in behavioral ecology. While most studies have focused on the outcomes of such combat encounters, the holding of a mating resource like a feeding site has a greater impact for obtaining reproductive success. We examined the effects of the prior residence at a feeding site on resource acquisition in the male-dimorphic stag beetle, Prosopocoilus inclinatus. More than 70 % of encounters did not result in combat. While larger males tended to occupy a food site after a combat, smaller males with prior residence tended to occupy food sites when no fighting occurred. Morph types or body size have no effect on the occurrence of combat, meaning that small males do not hesitate to fight with large males. These findings show that, under experimental conditions, the prior residence has a positive effect to hold food site in P. inclinatus.
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