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The notal organ of the scorpionfly (Panorpa vulgaris): an adaptation to coerce mating duration
Authors:Thornhill  Randy; Sauer  K Peter
Institution:Department of Biology, University of New Mexico Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA Faculty of Biology, University of Bielefeld PO Box 8640, 4800 Bielefeld 1, Germany
Abstract:The notal organ in P. vulgaris (Insecta: Mecoptera) is a clamplikestructure on the dorsum of the middle of the male’s abdomenthat holds one of the female’s forewings throughout mating.Males often provide salivary masses as food to their mates duringmating, and a male’s ability to produce saliva dependsupon whether he has fed adequately before mating. To test thehypothesis that the evolutionary function of the notal organis to coerce longer matings than are in the interests of females,the notal organ and the amount of food males and females receivebefore mating were experimentally manipulated. In support ofthe hypothesis, copulation was reduced when the notal organwas made inoperative under the following four conditions: (1)female fed and male starved before mating, no saliva duringmating; (2) same as in condition 1 but with one salivary massduring mating; (3) both sexes starved before mating, no salivarymass during mating; and (4) both sexes fed before mating. However,when females were starved before mating and males were fed,resulting in multiple masses being provided during mating, thenotal organ had no effect on length of copulation, and thusthere was no sexual conflict over mating duration. In addition,the larger the female relative to her mate, the briefer thecopulation when the notal organ was operative, which suggeststhat a physical struggle between the male and female may occurduring sexual conflict about mating duration. This is one ofonly a few studies that provide evidence of adaptation to thedomain of sexual coercion. Behav Ecol 1991;2:156–164]
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