首页|Level up: the expression of male sexually selected cuticular hydrocarbons is mediated by sexual experience

Level up: the expression of male sexually selected cuticular hydrocarbons is mediated by sexual experience

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The use of cuticular hydrocarbons (CHCs) in species recognition, sex identification and sexual selection is widespread in insects. However, few studies have studied plasticity in CHCs. Here we examine the effect of age and social environment on a suite of sexually selected CHCs in Drosophila serrata. We demonstrate that the combination of CHCs that is associated with increased male mating success (CHC beta changes as males age, and this effect is mediated by social environment. When single males were housed with multiple females, their expression of CHC beta increased across the first few days of their adult life, after which expression declined with increasing age. In contrast, sexually selected CHCs of males housed with other males, males housed with other males and females, and males housed alone all decreased across days. To determine the long-term consequences of mating on CHC expression, we allowed males a single mating opportunity and subsequently found some indication of a brief spike in CHC beta. Finally, to determine whether visual and olfactory contact with females, copulation, or intromission causes males to express high values of CHC beta, we manipulated male access and physical contact with females. We found that although prolonged copulation causes a slight increase in male CHC beta, only a successful copulation with sperm transfer induced males to develop CHCs associated with high mating success. Taken as a whole, our results demonstrate that the expression of sexually selected CHCs in males varies with both age and social context, and suggest that the latter is mediated at least in part by successful matings with females. More generally, contextual plasticity in CHCs is likely to affect both the experimental design of CHC-based experiments and the evolution of CHC signals as naturally and sexually selected traits. (C) 2015 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

epicuticular hydrocarbonsmatingpheromoneplasticitysexual selection

Gershman, Susan N.、Rundle, Howard D.

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Ohio State Univ Marion, Dept Evolut Ecol & Organismal Biol, Marion, OH 43302 USA

Univ Ottawa, Dept Biol, Ottawa, ON, Canada

2016

Animal behaviour

Animal behaviour

SCI
ISSN:0003-3472
年,卷(期):2016.112