4.3 Article

Impact of body melanization on mating success in Drosophila melanogaster

期刊

ENTOMOLOGIA EXPERIMENTALIS ET APPLICATA
卷 139, 期 1, 页码 47-59

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1570-7458.2011.01102.x

关键词

body color phenotypes; mating latency; mating speed; copulation duration; no-choice mating tests; Diptera; Drosophilidae

资金

  1. University Grants Commission, New Delhi

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Mating speed and copulation duration respond rapidly to laboratory selection in Drosophila melanogaster Meigen (Diptera: Drosophilidae), but there is a lack of data on the evolutionary response to natural selection in the wild. Further, it is not clear whether body melanization and mating behavior are correlated traits. Accordingly, we tested whether variation in body color impacts on mating latency, copulation duration, and fecundity in latitudinal populations of D. melanogaster. We observed geographical variation (cline) for mating propensity, i.e., mating speed as well as copulation duration increased along latitude. Phenotypic plastic responses for body melanization at 17 and 25 degrees C also showed significant correlations with mating latency and copulation duration. Within-population analysis based on assorted dark and light flies of five geographical populations showed significant positive correlations of copulation duration and fecundity with body melanization. To assess the role of males and/or females on mating speed and copulation duration, we used atypical body color strains (i.e., dark and light males of D. melanogaster) for no-choice mating tests. Our data showed a major influence of males for copulation duration and of females for mating speed. Furthermore, a difference in impact of body melanization on mating speed and copulation duration was demonstrated between species, i.e., low melanization in Drosophila ananassae Doleschall is correlated with lower mating speed and shorter copulation duration than in D. melanogaster. Geographical changes in mating propensity were significantly correlated with body melanization at three levels, i.e., within and between populations and between species. Thus, we have shown that a relationship exists between body melanization and mating success. Further, we found seasonal changes in temperature and humidity to confer selection pressures on mating-related traits.

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