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Female multiple mating in wild and laboratory populations of the two-spot ladybird, Adalia bipunctata

Female mating rate is an important variable for understanding the role of females in the evolution of mating systems. Polyandry influences patterns of sexual selection and has implications for sexual conflict over mating, as well as for wider issues such as patterns of gene flow and levels of geneti...

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Published in:Molecular ecology 2008-07, Vol.17 (13), p.3189-3197
Main Authors: HADDRILL, PENELOPE R, SHUKER, DAVID M, AMOS, WILLIAM, MAJERUS, MICHAEL E.N, MAYES, SEAN
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creator HADDRILL, PENELOPE R
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description Female mating rate is an important variable for understanding the role of females in the evolution of mating systems. Polyandry influences patterns of sexual selection and has implications for sexual conflict over mating, as well as for wider issues such as patterns of gene flow and levels of genetic diversity. Despite this, remarkably few studies of insects have provided detailed estimates of polyandry in the wild. Here we combine behavioural and molecular genetic data to assess female mating frequency in wild populations of the two-spot ladybird, Adalia bipunctata (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae). We also explore patterns of sperm use in a controlled laboratory environment to examine how sperm from multiple males is used over time by females, to link mating with fertilization. We confirm that females are highly polyandrous in the wild, both in terms of population mating rates (~20% of the population found in copula at any given time) and the number of males siring offspring in a single clutch (three to four males, on average). These patterns are consistent across two study populations. Patterns of sperm use in the laboratory show that the number of mates does not exceed the number of fathers, suggesting that females have little postcopulatory influence on paternity. Instead, longer copulations result in higher paternity for males, probably due to the transfer of larger numbers of sperm in multiple spermatophores. Our results emphasize the importance of combining field and laboratory data to explore mating rates in the wild.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2008.03812.x
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source Wiley-Blackwell Read & Publish Collection
subjects Adalia bipunctata
Animal reproduction
Animals
Coccinellidae
Coleoptera
Coleoptera - genetics
Coleoptera - physiology
Ecology
Female
Females
Insects
ladybird
Male
Mating Preference, Animal - physiology
microsatellite repeats
microsatellites
Molecular biology
paternity analysis
polyandry
Population genetics
Sexual Behavior, Animal
sexual conflict
sperm competition
Spermatozoa - physiology
title Female multiple mating in wild and laboratory populations of the two-spot ladybird, Adalia bipunctata
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