MATE CHOICE IN TREE CRICKETS AND THEIR KIN
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Entomology
- Vol. 44 (1) , 371-396
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.ento.44.1.371
Abstract
▪ Abstract Mate choice theory has become a major field of research in behavioral ecology. Tree crickets provide excellent opportunities for studying the diversity and variability of mate choice. The evidence for female mate choice in tree crickets is reviewed, and broad comparisons with other orthopteran groups are made. The evidence shows that female choice may occur during several different stages of mating and may target several different criteria. Song preferences are perhaps dominated by stabilizing preferences for the cues of species recognition, but there is a growing body of evidence for directional preferences based on sensory biases or mate quality. Mate rejection during courtship and forms of postcopulatory choice may favor males, based both on phenotypic quality and on the amount of nutritious courtship gifts they provide, and may differ with the value of mating incentives. Understanding the balance and trade-offs between different forms of mate choice may help in understanding their evolutionary causes.Keywords
This publication has 116 references indexed in Scilit:
- Wing‐flick Signals in the Courtship of the African Cave Cricket, Phaeophilacris spectrumEthology, 1997
- Ultrasubharmonic resonance and nonlinear dynamics in the song of Oecanthus nigricornis F. Walker (Orthoptera : Gryllidae)International Journal of Insect Morphology and Embryology, 1993
- Incidental effects and evolution of sound-producing organs in tree crickets (Orthoptera : Oecanthidae)International Journal of Insect Morphology and Embryology, 1993
- Female mate choice in treefrogs: static and dynamic acoustic criteriaAnimal Behaviour, 1991
- Acoustic communication in the trilling field cricket,Gryllus rubens (Orthoptera: Gryllidae)Journal of Insect Behavior, 1991
- Testing Parental Investment and the Control of Sexual Selection in Katydids: The Operational Sex RatioThe American Naturalist, 1990
- Science in Pictures: The Mating of Tree CricketsScientific American, 1989
- Energy, Calling, and SelectionAmerican Zoologist, 1988
- Stridulation and tegminal resonance in the tree cricket Oecanthus nigricornis (Orthoptera: Gryllidae: Oecanthinae)Journal of Comparative Physiology A, 1979
- Use of a self-made sound baffle by a tree cricketNature, 1975