The adult component of selection in Drosophila melanogaster: some aspects of early-remating activity of females
- 1 September 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Heredity
- Vol. 71 (3) , 269-276
- https://doi.org/10.1038/hdy.1993.135
Abstract
As an important factor of the adult component of selection, mating behaviour was studied in Drosophila melanogaster, with emphasis on non-virgin females. We found that 30–50 per cent of the females in a laboratory population will remate within 6 h of first mating under no-choice conditions. This high percentage of early rematings was not due to the continuous confinement of the females with males but indicated a rapid return of receptivity of a significant proportion of the females. Remating behaviour was significantly influenced by both the genotype of the female and the genotype of her two successive partners. Age of females was only important insofar as it concerned young, 1 or 2-day old, females. These females showed less remating than older females. Willingness to remate was also affected by the number of sperm stored. Females that had been inseminated by less fertile males, i.e. males that had already mated two or three times, showed higher remating percentages than females inseminated by more fertile males. Notwithstanding this sperm effect, females were estimated to remate approximately every second day. It is suggested that a high frequency of remating and the resulting sperm competition are significant components of Drosophila life-history.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- A male accessory gland peptide that regulates reproductive behavior of female D. melanogasterCell, 1988
- Local Ecology and Multiple Mating in a Natural Population of Drosophila melanogasterThe American Naturalist, 1988
- The timing of the sperm effect on female Drosophila melanogaster receptivityAnimal Behaviour, 1987
- The Functional Morphology and Biochemistry of Insect Male Accessory Glands and their SecretionsAnnual Review of Entomology, 1984
- Genetic Basis for Repeated Mating in Drosophila melanogasterThe American Naturalist, 1981
- Polymorphism at the G6PD and 6PGD loci inDrosophila melanogaster: I. Evidence for selection in experimental populationsGenetics Research, 1977
- Courtship latency in maleDrosophila melanogasterBehavior Genetics, 1977
- Analysis of truncated distributions: Mating speed inDrosophila melanogasterBehavior Genetics, 1976
- SPERM COMPETITION AND ITS EVOLUTIONARY CONSEQUENCES IN THE INSECTSBiological Reviews, 1970
- A Sperm Factor Affecting the Receptivity of Drosophila Melanogaster FemalesNature, 1962