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Operational Sex Ratio and Individual Mating Frequencies in Two Bushcricket Species (Orthoptera,Tettigonioidea, Poecilimon)
Authors:Klaus-Gerhard Heller  Dagmar von Helversen
Abstract:During mating the male bushericket transfers a large spermatophore which is consumed by the female after copulation. Such a ‘nuptial gift' is likely to have strong effects on the mating frequency of both males and females and thus on the operational sex ratio (OSR): For the male a longer time period will be required in which he is prevented from further matings. For the female consumption may be advantageous increasing interest in matings. To quantify these effects field studies were carried out on two species of the genus Poecilimon. Both species differed widely in the mean number of matings observed per day (19% of all females in P. veluchianus compaied to 42% in P. affinis; Fig. 2) and thus in the distribution of female mating intervals (P. veluchianus 2 days, P. affinis 1 day (modes); Fig. 3). Separate experiments on the minimum male mating interval and the spermatophore weight also revealed distinct differences: the mean spermatophore weight was 26% of the male body weight in P. veluchianus and 15% in P. affinis (Fig. 6). Accordingly the refractory period was longer in P. veluchianus; 3 days after a previous mating nearh all males were ready to remate, compared to 2 days in P. affinis (Fig. 5). These differences, however, compensated one another in that the amount of spermatophylax material transferred per day was very similar in both species in relation to female body weight. Using data on female mating frequency per day and male remating ability, an upper estimate for the OSR was calculated. A lower limit for the OSR was given taking into account the most frequent female mating interval (big. 7). In both species the OSR remained relatively constant for large parts of the season. The medians (upper/lower estimate for the ratio males to females ready to mate: 2.95/1.19 in P. veluchianus; 2.22 0.88 in P. affinis) were very low, comparable to that in explosive breeding frog species. Thus in the bushcricket mating system, females may be able to demand large male mating efforts so that the operational sex ratio can come close to unity.
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