Body size is clearly an important factor influencing the outcome of agonistic contests, but is often weakly correlated with dominance ranks in Zorotypus gurneyi Choe (Insecta: Zoraptera). The study of the development and dynamics of dominance relations using artificially constructed colonies show th
Sexual selection and mating system inZorotypus gurneyiChoe (Insecta : Zoraptera)
β Scribed by Jae C. Choel
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 719 KB
- Volume
- 34
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0340-5443
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β¦ Synopsis
Zorotypus gurneyi Choe (Insecta: Zoraptera) is a wing-dimorphic species that lives colonially under the bark of rotting logs in central Panama. Males are larger than females in total body size and fight each other to gain access to females. Highly linear and stable dominance hierarchies exist among males. Higher-ranking males show such agonistic behavior as jerking, chasing, headbutting, hindleg-kicking, and grappling, whereas subordinates often try to avoid contacts. Higher-ranking males, the dominant males in particular, are well recognized by others and relatively free of injuries. Although the dominant males are often the largest, the correlation between body size and dominance rank is not always significant. The mating system of Z. gurneyi is an example of female defense polygyny in which the dominant males obtain the majority of matings (75% on average).
Mating success among Z. gurneyi males is much more variable than that of some lekking species.
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