Search results for "Courtship"

showing 10 items of 108 documents

Species-specific effects of single sensillum ablation on mating position in Drosophila.

2003

0022-0949 (Print) Comparative Study Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't; Dipteran insects show a wide range of species-specific mating positions. Interspecific transitions from one position to another may reflect sexual or natural selection, or be pleiotropic consequences of other genetic changes. Like many cyclorrhaphan flies, Drosophila species mate with the male on the back of the female, positioned centrally. Mechanosensory sensilla on the male genitalia of three species of the melanogaster species sub-group of Drosophila have species-specific effects on mating position and on courtship success: ablation of a single pair of bristles on the genital claspers of D. melanogaste…

MalePhysiologyEvolutionmedia_common.quotation_subjectSexual BehaviorInsectAquatic ScienceGenitalia MaleElectronCourtshipMale/ultrastructureSexual Behavior AnimalDrosophila/anatomy & histology/*physiologySpecies SpecificityMelanogasterMechanoreceptors/*physiologyAnimalsScanningGenitaliaMatingMolecular BiologyDrosophilaSensillumEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsreproductive and urinary physiologymedia_commonMicroscopyAnalysis of VariancebiologyAnimalfungiAnatomybiology.organism_classificationBiological EvolutionEvolutionary biologyInsect ScienceSexual selectionbehavior and behavior mechanismsMicroscopy Electron ScanningAnimal Science and ZoologyDrosophilaDrosophila melanogasterMechanoreceptorsThe Journal of experimental biology
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Incipient speciation in Drosophila melanogaster involves chemical signals.

2012

WOS: 000300572900001; International audience; The sensory and genetic bases of incipient speciation between strains of Drosophila melanogaster from Zimbabwe and those from elsewhere are unknown. We studied mating behaviour between eight strains - six from Zimbabwe, together with two cosmopolitan strains. The Zimbabwe strains showed significant sexual isolation when paired with cosmopolitan males, due to Zimbabwe females discriminating against these males. Our results show that flies' cuticular hydrocarbons (CHs) were involved in this sexual isolation, but that visual and acoustic signals were not. The mating frequency of Zimbabwe females was highly significantly negatively correlated with t…

MaleQH301 Biology[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionSpeciationreproductive isolationZoologyEvolutionary biologyBiologyArticlepolymorphismQH301desaturase geneMolecular evolutionsexual isolationBiologie animale/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1000evolutionBiologie de la reproductionSEXUAL ISOLATION;CUTICULAR HYDROCARBONS;REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION;DESATURASE GENE;COURTSHIP SONG;PHEROMONES;POPULATIONS;EVOLUTION;POLYMORPHISM;MUTATIONAnimalsGeneralGeneAnimal biologyGeneticsReproductive BiologyMultidisciplinarycourtship songcuticular hydrocarbonsBiologie du développementIncipient speciationAnimal behaviourbiology.organism_classificationpopulationsDevelopment BiologyHydrocarbonsDrosophila melanogasterMolecular evolutionFemaleDrosophila melanogastermutationpheromones[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and Nutrition
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SIMULATING RANGE EXPANSION: MALE SPECIES RECOGNITION AND LOSS OF PREMATING ISOLATION IN DAMSELFLIES

2009

Prolonged periods of allopatry might result in loss of the ability to discriminate against other formerly sympatric species, and can lead to heterospecific matings and hybridization upon secondary contact. Loss of premating isolation during prolonged allopatry can operate in the opposite direction of reinforcement, but has until now been little explored. We investigated how premating isolation between two closely related damselfly species, Calopteryx splendens and C. virgo, might be affected by the expected future northward range expansion of C. splendens into the allopatric zone of C. virgo in northern Scandinavia. We simulated the expected secondary contact by presenting C. splendens fema…

MaleSympatryInsectaRange (biology)Ecologymedia_common.quotation_subjectAllopatric speciationZoologyGeographic variationBiologybiology.organism_classificationCourtshipSexual Behavior AnimalDamselflyAnimal ecologySympatric speciationGeneticsAnimalsFemaleGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_commonEvolution
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Effect of genes, social experience, and their interaction on the courtship behaviour of transgenic Drosophila males

2005

Behaviour depends (a) on genes that specify the neural and non-neural elements involved in the perception of and responses to sensory stimuli and (b) on experience that can modulate the fine development of these elements. We exposed transgenic and control Drosophila melanogaster males, and their hybrids, to male siblings during adult development and measured the contribution of genes and of experience to their courtship behaviour. The transgene CheB42a specifically targets male gustatory sensillae and alters the perception of male inhibitory pheromones which leads to frequent male–male interactions. The age at which social experience occurred and the genotype of tester males induced a varia…

MaleX ChromosomeGenotypemedia_common.quotation_subjectTransgeneSexual BehaviorSensory systemGenes InsectInsectGenetics Behavioralmedicine.disease_causeCourtshipSexual Behavior AnimalX Chromosome/physiologyMale/geneticsmedicineGeneticsAnimal/*physiologyDrosophila ProteinsAnimalsTransgenesHomosexuality MaleSocial BehaviorBehavioralmedia_commonGeneticsMutationbiologyCourtship displayfungiCourtshipGeneral MedicineHomosexualitybiology.organism_classificationDrosophila Proteins/genetics/physiologyGenesSex pheromoneDrosophila/genetics/*physiologyDrosophilaFemaleDrosophila melanogasterInsect
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An inhibitory sex pheromone tastes bitter for Drosophila males

2007

1932-6203 (Electronic) Journal Article; Sexual behavior requires animals to distinguish between the sexes and to respond appropriately to each of them. In Drosophila melanogaster, as in many insects, cuticular hydrocarbons are thought to be involved in sex recognition and in mating behavior, but there is no direct neuronal evidence of their pheromonal effect. Using behavioral and electrophysiological measures of responses to natural and synthetic compounds, we show that Z-7-tricosene, a Drosophila male cuticular hydrocarbon, acts as a sex pheromone and inhibits male-male courtship. These data provide the first direct demonstration that an insect cuticular hydrocarbon is detected as a sex ph…

Malelcsh:MedicineEvolutionary Biology/Sexual BehaviorInsectCourtshipToxicologySexual Behavior Animal0302 clinical medicineMatingSex Attractantslcsh:Science[SDV.BDD]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Development Biologymedia_commonAnimal biologyNeurons0303 health sciencesPhysiology/Sensory SystemsSex CharacteristicsMultidisciplinaryNeuroscience/Behavioral Neurosciencebiology[SDV.BA]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Animal biologyBiologie du développementDevelopment Biology3. Good healthCell biologyDrosophila melanogasterSex pheromoneTastePheromoneDrosophila melanogasterSex characteristicsResearch Articleanimal structuresGenotypemedia_common.quotation_subject03 medical and health sciencesCaffeineBiologie animaleEcology/Behavioral EcologyAnimalsHomosexuality MaleLighting030304 developmental biologyEvolutionary Biology/Animal Behaviorlcsh:Rfungibiology.organism_classificationSex Attractantslcsh:Q030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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A trade-off between sexual signalling and immune function in a natural population of the drumming wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata.

2005

The field of ecological immunology is ultimately seeking to address the question ‘Why is there variation in immune function?’ Here, we provide experimental evidence that costs of ubiquitous sexual signals are a significant source of variation in immune function. In the mating season, males of the wolf spider Hygrolycosa rubrofasciata drum against dry leaves while wandering around the habitat searching for receptive females. According to a previous study, the male metabolic rate during the drumming increases 22-fold compared to the resting metabolic rate. In the present study, we examined whether investment in costly courtship drumming decreases male immune function in a wild population of H…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectPopulationWolf spiderZoologyCourtshipSexual Behavior AnimalHemolymphSeasonal breederAnimalsAnimal communicationeducationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsFinlandmedia_commoneducation.field_of_studybiologyEcologySpidersbiology.organism_classificationImmunity InnateAnimal CommunicationNatural population growthMate choiceSexual selectionFemaleEnergy MetabolismAntimicrobial Cationic PeptidesJournal of evolutionary biology
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Female-released sex pheromones mediating courtship behavior in Lysiphlebus testaceipes males.

2013

Ethological aspects and chemical communication at close-range between the sexes of Lysiphlebus testaceipes Cresson (Hymenoptera: Braconidae) have been investigated through behavioral bioassays and chemical analysis. The attractiveness toward males of whole-body extracts of females and males in hexane and acetone was evaluated, adopting male fanning behavior as a key behavioral component. Also, the activity of polar and nonpolar fraction of female-body extract in hexane obtained using solid-phase extraction technique was investigated. In order to identify cuticular compounds, male and female whole-body extracts with hexane and acetone were analyzed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Th…

Malemedia_common.quotation_subjectWaspswing fanningHymenopteraArticleCourtshipToxicologyAcetonechemistry.chemical_compoundSexual Behavior AnimalBraconidaeclose-range communicationAnimalsHexanesFood scienceSex Attractantsnonpolar fractionpolar fractionmedia_commoncuticular compoundsbiologyCourtship displayGeneral Medicinebiology.organism_classificationHydrocarbonsmatingSolventHexanechemistryInsect ScienceSex pheromoneSex AttractantsFemaleBraconidaeJournal of insect science (Online)
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Courtship, Mating, and Sex Pheromones in the Mealworm Beetle (Tenebrio molitor)

2003

Publisher Summary This chapter focuses on courtship and mating in a coleopteran, the yellow mealworm beetle (Tenebrio molitor), observation and description of the behavior of (relatively) undisturbed animals, and the response of male Tenebrio molitor to the female sex attractant pheromone. Pheromones used in communication between members of the opposite sex in a mating context are collectively termed sex pheromones. In many insect species, detection of a sex pheromone is often sufficient to initiate the species-typical courtship and mating behaviors, although the release of these behaviors can be modified by visual, tactile, acoustic, or other types of stimuli. For example, upon detecting a…

MealwormCommunicationbusiness.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyContext (language use)InsectBiologybiology.organism_classificationBombykolCourtshipchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistrySex pheromonePheromoneMatingbusinessmedia_common
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Chemosensory cues allow male Tenebrio molitor beetles to assess the reproductive status of potential mates

2004

Males of many insect species, including beetles, choose their mates according to their reproductive status. However, the ways in which male beetles evaluate female reproductive status have received little attention. We tested the existence of male mate choice in the mealworm beetle, Tenebrio molitor, by observing mating and courtship behaviour of males given simultaneous access to pairs of females differing in their reproductive status: (1) mature versus immature; (2) virgin versus previously mated; (3) familiar (mated with the experimental male) versus unfamiliar (mated with a different male). Males courted and mated preferentially with mature and virgin females. To determine whether chemi…

MealwormCourtship displayEcologymedia_common.quotation_subjectZoologyInsectBiologybiology.organism_classificationMate choicebehavior and behavior mechanismsAnimal Science and ZoologyMatingreproductive and urinary physiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicsmedia_common
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Voila, a New Drosophila Courtship Variant that Affects the Nervous System: Behavioral, Neural, and Genetic Characterization

1998

InDrosophila melanogaster, a specificPGAL4transposon induces theVoila1genetic variant and produces multiple phenotypes. HomozygousVoila1/1flies rarely reach adulthood, whereas heterozygousVoila1/+adult males show strong bisexual behavior. Males with a single copy ofVoila1driving the feminizing transgeneUAS-transformershow very reduced sexual activity but no overall effect on their behavior.Voila1is specifically expressed in the nervous system. In the CNS, it is expressed mainly in the mushroom bodies and, to a lesser extent, in the antennal lobes. In the peripheral nervous system, GAL4 expression is almost entirely restricted to the gustatory sensilla. Using chromosomal deficiencies, the be…

Nervous systemMaleGene ExpressionGenes InsectPheromonesWing0302 clinical medicineWings AnimalDrosophila melanogaster/*geneticsGene Expression/physiologyGenetics0303 health sciencesbiologyGeneral NeuroscienceInsect physiologyChromosome MappingInsect/*physiologyPhenotypemedicine.anatomical_structurePeripheral Nervous System/chemistryDrosophila melanogasterLac OperonPeripheral nervous systemMushroom bodiesFemaleDrosophila melanogasterTransgeneArticleChromosomesBrain Chemistry/physiology03 medical and health sciencesDNA Transposable Elements/physiologyPeripheral Nervous SystemmedicinePheromones/physiologyAnimalsGene030304 developmental biologyBrain ChemistryCourtshipExtremitiesSex Determination Processesbiology.organism_classificationGanglia InvertebrateInvertebrate/chemistryGenesDNA Transposable ElementsSex Determination (Genetics)Ganglia030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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