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Female benefit, male risk: Polyandry in the true armywormPseudaletia unipuncta

✍ Scribed by Lena Svärd; Jeremy N. McNeil


Publisher
Springer
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Weight
919 KB
Volume
35
Category
Article
ISSN
0340-5443

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✦ Synopsis


In Lepidoptera polyandry is common and females may increase their lifetime reproductive output through repeated matings if they acquire essential resources from male ejaculates. However, the paternity of males mating with previously-mated females is far from assured unless sperm precedence is absolute. In this study on the polyandrous armyworm, Pseudaletia unipuncta, we used two strains of male (the black-eyed wild type and a red-eyed homozygous, recessive mutant), mated with red-eyed females, to determine (i) whether male investment has any impact on female reproductive output, and (ii) if females do benefit from multiple matings, to what extent males fertilize the eggs to which they contributed. Multiple mating resulted in a significant increase in both the fecundity and longevity of females. However, the degree of sperm precedence (those eggs fertilized by the second male) varied from 0 100%, but was not affected by either male size or age, or by the duration of copulation. In cases where sperm precedence was <50% (~ = 12%) females produced significantly more eggs (1384 versus 940) prior to the second mating than females where sperm precedence was >50% (£ = 89%), indicating that the quality of the first mating influenced the fertilization success of the female's second mate.