Title of article :
Finding hidden females in a crowd: Mate recognition in fig wasps
Author/Authors :
Krishnan، نويسنده , , Anusha and Joshi، نويسنده , , Kanchan Anand and Abraham، نويسنده , , Ambily and Ayyub، نويسنده , , Shreya and Lahiry، نويسنده , , Mohini and Mukherjee، نويسنده , , Ritwika and Javadekar، نويسنده , , Saniya Milind and Narayan، نويسنده , , Vignesh and Borges، نويسنده , , Renee M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages :
8
From page :
80
To page :
87
Abstract :
Multi-species mating aggregations are crowded environments within which mate recognition must occur. Mating aggregations of fig wasps can consist of thousands of individuals of many species that attain sexual maturity simultaneously and mate in the same microenvironment, i.e, in syntopy, within the close confines of an enclosed globular inflorescence called a syconium – a system that has many signalling constraints such as darkness and crowding. All wasps develop within individual galled flowers. Since mating mostly occurs when females are still confined within their galls, male wasps have the additional burden of detecting conspecific females that are “hidden” behind barriers consisting of gall walls. In Ficus racemosa, we investigated signals used by pollinating fig wasp males to differentiate conspecific females from females of other syntopic fig wasp species. Male Ceratosolen fusciceps could detect conspecific females using cues from galls containing females, empty galls, as well as cues from gall volatiles and gall surface hydrocarbons. y figs, syconia are pollinated by single foundress wasps, leading to high levels of wasp inbreeding due to sibmating. In F. racemosa, as most syconia contain many foundresses, we expected male pollinators to prefer non-sib females to female siblings to reduce inbreeding. We used galls containing females from non-natal figs as a proxy for non-sibs and those from natal figs as a proxy for sibling females. We found that males preferred galls of female pollinators from natal figs. However, males were undecided when given a choice between galls containing non-pollinator females from natal syconia and pollinator females from non-natal syconia, suggesting olfactory imprinting by the natal syconial environment.
Keywords :
Olfactory imprinting , volatiles , species recognition , Cuticular hydrocarbons , Extended phenotype , mate recognition
Journal title :
Acta Oecologica
Serial Year :
2014
Journal title :
Acta Oecologica
Record number :
1740975
Link To Document :
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