4.2 Article

Age-specific changes in sperm levels among female tsetse (Glossina spp.) with a model for the time course of insemination

Journal

PHYSIOLOGICAL ENTOMOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 3, Pages 278-290

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3032.2012.00845.x

Keywords

Glossina; insemination; model; ovulation; polyandry; tsetse

Categories

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, Government of South Africa
  2. European Union [221948]

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The age, insemination and ovulation status of tsetse flies Glossina pallidipes Austen (n = 154369) and Glossina morsitans morsitans Westwood (n = 19659), captured over 11 years in Zimbabwe, are assessed by ovarian dissection. Instantaneous rates of insemination increase exponentially with age in both species; 90% insemination levels are reached after 5 days post-emergence in G. m. morsitans and 7 days in G. pallidipes, varying little with season. More than 95% of both species have ovulated by the age of 8 days and 99% by 12 days. Older flies that have not ovulated are > 100-fold more likely to be caught in October and November than in other months. A 500-fold decrease in trap catches did not result in any detectible decrease in the probability of females being inseminated. The proportion of partially filled spermathecae rises for approximately 6 days then declines, consistent with some flies having mated more than once. For flies caught on electric nets, with wings undamaged during capture, wing-fray data are used to extend ovarian age estimates up to 11 ovulations. Among these flies, the volume of sperm in the spermathecae declines little in flies that have ovulated up to seven times; thereafter, it declines by approximately 1% per ovulation. The time course of insemination and the mating frequency of females are important considerations in modelling tsetse fly populations, as well as for the dynamics of interventions involving the release of genetically-modified insects, which should not be seriously compromised by the limited levels of polyandry currently observed.

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