The recently described parasitoid braconid wasp, Napo townsendi (Hymenoptera: Braconidae: Euphorinae: Dinocampini), forms leks and deters predators in the Ecuadorian cloud forest

2015 ◽  
Vol 35 (03) ◽  
pp. 103-116
Author(s):  
Willard S. Robinson ◽  
Delina E. Dority ◽  
Andy J. Kulikowski ◽  
Scott R. Shaw

In the Ecuadorian cloud forest, males of the parasitoid braconid waspNapo townsendiShaw displayed facultative lekking, appearing both singly and in groups of 2–7 on the leaf tops of various plant species. To attract females, they constantly employed a stereotypical, spread-winged calling behaviour, apparently releasing a sex pheromone combed from the lateral metasomal exocrine glands and applied to the wings and hind legs. Aggregated males used the same posture in conspecific agonistic displays, often leading to physical fighting. While female wasps were attracted to and mated with displaying singletons, they also made a choice among aggregated males. When females approached, males vibrated their wings in a brief courtship and mounted. Details of copulation behaviour, which lasted on an average of 3–4 min, are described. Without apparent physical weaponry, the displaying wasps successfully warded off attacks from an assortment of predatory arthropods, particularly salticid spiders. We present case studies of repeated unsuccessful predation attempts by salticids. Here, we postulate that calling and release of sex pheromone may double as both an intrasexual agonistic display and an aposematic advisory to predators that the wasps employ a chemical defence.

1993 ◽  
Vol 183 (1) ◽  
pp. 61-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. G. Kingan ◽  
P. A. Thomas-Laemont ◽  
A. K. Raina

After mating, the females of many species of moths become depleted of sex pheromone, calling behaviour is terminated, and they become transiently or permanently unreceptive to additional matings. In the corn earworm moth, Helicoverpa zea, we have found that the male accessory gland/duplex is required for evoking the post-mating depletion of sex pheromone but apparently not for the cessation of calling. The latter change requires the receipt of a spermatophore or a chemical messenger derived from non-accessory gland/duplex sources. Desalted extracts of combined accessory glands and duplexes caused a depletion of pheromone in injected females. Proteinaceous components in extracts purified by fractionation in cation-exchange cartridges and by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromotography retain their pheromonostatic activity. In addition, this fractionated material shuts off calling behaviour and prevents mating in injected females, raising the possibility that redundant mechanisms exist in eliciting the different components of ‘mated’ behaviour.


2008 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bianca G. Ambrogi ◽  
Marcy G. Fonseca ◽  
Miryan D. A. Coracini ◽  
Paulo H. G. Zarbin

1997 ◽  
Vol 129 (4) ◽  
pp. 667-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Edwards ◽  
W.D. Seabrook

AbstractTrials using four different sex combinations of Colorado potato beetle, Leptinotarsa decemlineata Say, demonstrated that male beetles move upwind towards females, whereas no attraction was seen between any of the other combinations. Attraction was not found to increase significantly after the female reached 10 days old. Visual stimuli appear to be unimportant from a distance of 50 cm. Orientation behaviour by the male beetle was observed as it walked upwind towards the female; no identifiable calling behaviour by the female was observed. The data indicate a sex pheromone is being produced by the female and is used by the male for mate location from a distance.


1973 ◽  
Vol 105 (12) ◽  
pp. 1505-1512 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. T. Cardé ◽  
W. L. Roelofs

AbstractIn Holomelina immaculata (Reakirt) periodicity of male attraction to synthetic 2-methylheptadecane, the female-produced sex pheromone, is modified by temperature cues. In the field this response interval occurs from approximately sunset to about 4 h after sunset on a warm day and night (30° to 17 °C) and for the 2 h prior to sunset on a cool day and night (23° to 16 °C).In laboratory studies at 24 °C female H. immaculata placed in continual scotophase have an endogenous calling rhythm, but they are apparently inhibited from calling by constant photophase. In 16:8 or 12:12 light–dark cycles at 24 °C calling occurs from the 2nd to the 6th hour of scotophase, whereas at 15 °C calling takes place from the initiation to the 5th hour of scotophase. The critical cues governing initiation of calling behaviour are lights-off or a temperature decrease cue, and a temperature decrease signal overrides the apparent inhibitory effect of continual photophase.


2000 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 453-460 ◽  
Author(s):  
Álvaro E. Eiras

Adult emergence and mating behavior of Neoleucinodes elegantalis Guenée were studied under laboratory conditions (23 ± 1°C, 12 h photophase and 70% RH). Adult emergence occurred only at scotophase period. Female began to emerge from the 1st hour to 8th hour with a peak occurring at 4th hour of scotophase. Male showed similar trend, but emerging from 2nd to 11th with a peak also at 4th hour of scotophase. Mating was preceded by wing vibration in the male prior to and during walking approach. Mating occurred only during the scotophase period between the 4th and 10th hour of scotophase, with the peak occurring at the 7th hour. Newly emerged N. elegantalis couples rarely mated (2.8%) whereas 48 and 96 h old couples mated 26.3% and 27.5% respectively. Glands extracts from abdominal tips of 48-72 h virgin female moths evaluated in a wind tunnel were more attractive than virgin females.


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