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Sexually transmitted parasites and host mating behavior in the decorated cricket
Authors:Luong  Lien T; Kaya  Harry K
Institution:a Department of Entomology, and b Department of Nematology, University of California, Davis One Shields Avenue, Davis, CA 95616, USA
Abstract:Sexually transmitted diseases play a potentially important rolein the ecology and evolution of host mating behavior. Here,we use a sexually transmitted nematode-cricket (Mehdinema alii–Gryllodessigillatus) system to examine the effects of parasitism on hostmating activity and female choice. Previous work has shown thatinfected male crickets produce a significantly smaller nuptialgift (spermatophylax) than uninfected males. This is expectedto result in reduced spermatophylax feeding duration and earlyampulla removal. Here, we hypothesize that the parasite-mediatedreduction in spermatophylax size will consequently shorten femaleintercopulatory interval. We predict that females mated to infectedmales will exhibit a shorter intercopulatory interval than femalesmated to uninfected males. To test this hypothesis, we experimentallymeasured the behavioral responses of females mated to uninfectedand infected males. We found no significant difference betweenfemale handling of the spermatophylax and ampulla from infectedversus uninfected males. Although the duration of spermatophylaxconsumption is positively correlated with the duration of ampullaattachment, neither of these variables is correlated with femaleintercopulatory interval. Intercopulatory intervals for femalespreviously mated with uninfected versus infected males are notstatistically different. We conclude that parasitism in maleG. sigillatus does not influence female intercopulatory intervalor male mating success. We found no evidence for female matechoice based on male infection status. The lack of female choiceis consistent with theoretical predictions involving parasitesthat are sexually transmitted.
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