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Disparity in sexual behaviour between wild and mass‐reared M exican fruit flies
The s terile i nsect t echnique ( SIT ) is currently used to control M exican fruit fly Anastrepha ludens L oew ( D iptera: T ephritidae). However, mass‐rearing can alter the quality of released males. If males that are mass‐reared have behaviours different from those of their wild counterparts, the...
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Published in: | Physiological entomology 2014-09, Vol.39 (3), p.263-270 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The
s
terile
i
nsect
t
echnique (
SIT
) is currently used to control
M
exican fruit fly
Anastrepha ludens
L
oew (
D
iptera:
T
ephritidae). However, mass‐rearing can alter the quality of released males. If males that are mass‐reared have behaviours different from those of their wild counterparts, then this may diminish the effectiveness of
SIT
. Questions remain as to whether wild females may be able to detect the male condition before, during and/or after copulation with a mass‐reared male. In the present study, copula duration, female remating, female fecundity and fertility of both mass‐reared and wild
A. ludens
are evaluated. Marked differences are found between mass‐reared and wild females. Specifically, mating latency is longer and copula duration is shorter for wild females compared with mass‐reared females. Importantly, there are no significant differences in mating latency, copula duration or remating probability between wild females paired with either mass‐reared or wild males. All mass‐reared females remate, whereas only approximately half of the wild females remate after first mating with either a wild or mass‐reared male. Fecundity of wild females mated to either wild or mass‐reared males is approximately one‐third lower than that of mass‐reared females, confirming that mass‐reared females may have been selected for high fecundity and are adapted to laboratory conditions. Fertility of females that mate with a wild male for only 10 min is not significantly different from that achieved via a full‐length copulation. By contrast, females mating with mass‐reared males need copulation durations of at least 40 min to achieve fertility comparable with that achieved via a full‐length copulation. The findings of the present study have important implications for
A. ludens
controlled through
SIT
and broaden our understanding on the copulatory and post‐copulatory behaviours between wild females and mass‐reared males. |
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ISSN: | 0307-6962 1365-3032 |
DOI: | 10.1111/phen.12071 |