TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of female mating status on male offspring traits
AU - Gottlieb, D.
AU - Lubin, Y.
AU - Harari, A. R.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments The authors gratefully acknowledge Tamar Keasar and her lab members for stimulating discussions and Peter H. Biedermann for his friendship and constructive comments on this manuscript. We thank Ofer Ovadia for assistance with image capture software and Dvorah Gordon for lab assistance. We thank four anonymous referees for very useful comments. We are grateful to Ian Hardy for suggesting areas of major improvement. This research was partially supported by the Israel Science Foundation grant 184/06 to A. Bouskila, T. Keasar, and A. R. Harari.
PY - 2014/5/1
Y1 - 2014/5/1
N2 - In haplodiploid insects, males develop from unfertilized eggs; consequently, unmated females can reproduce. In a patchy, highly structured population, where brothers compete for mates and the reproductive return through sons is lower, females should minimize the number of male offspring. Consequently, unmated females are likely to have a reduced fitness compared to mated females. Here, we tested the oviposition behaviour of the haplodiploid beetle Coccotrypes dactyliperda. In this species, the unmated female can mate with her son to produce daughters. We predicted that unmated females could increase their fitness by (1) producing only few and small sons sufficient for mother-son mating and (2) dispersing to a patch occupied by conspecific females in order to increase their or their sons' chance of mating. We demonstrate that (1) unmated females are common (23 % of all females), (2) they oviposit more frequently than mated females in occupied patches, (3) unmated females oviposit more eggs than mated females-this is in spite of the trade-offs, evident in this study, between the number of sons and the number of the mother's future offspring after mating, (4) unmated females have a higher proportion of dispersing sons, and (5) sons of unmated females are smaller than sons of mated females. We conclude that the incidence of unmated females in the structured populations of C. dactyliperda is explained by plasticity in their oviposition behaviour. We discuss conditions where a high incidence of unmated females can persist as a successful strategy in structured populations.
AB - In haplodiploid insects, males develop from unfertilized eggs; consequently, unmated females can reproduce. In a patchy, highly structured population, where brothers compete for mates and the reproductive return through sons is lower, females should minimize the number of male offspring. Consequently, unmated females are likely to have a reduced fitness compared to mated females. Here, we tested the oviposition behaviour of the haplodiploid beetle Coccotrypes dactyliperda. In this species, the unmated female can mate with her son to produce daughters. We predicted that unmated females could increase their fitness by (1) producing only few and small sons sufficient for mother-son mating and (2) dispersing to a patch occupied by conspecific females in order to increase their or their sons' chance of mating. We demonstrate that (1) unmated females are common (23 % of all females), (2) they oviposit more frequently than mated females in occupied patches, (3) unmated females oviposit more eggs than mated females-this is in spite of the trade-offs, evident in this study, between the number of sons and the number of the mother's future offspring after mating, (4) unmated females have a higher proportion of dispersing sons, and (5) sons of unmated females are smaller than sons of mated females. We conclude that the incidence of unmated females in the structured populations of C. dactyliperda is explained by plasticity in their oviposition behaviour. We discuss conditions where a high incidence of unmated females can persist as a successful strategy in structured populations.
KW - Coccotrypes dactyliperda
KW - Local mate competition
KW - Male dispersal
KW - Oviposition
KW - Trade-off
KW - Unmated females
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84898900685&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s00265-014-1683-1
DO - 10.1007/s00265-014-1683-1
M3 - Article
C2 - 24771959
AN - SCOPUS:84898900685
VL - 68
SP - 701
EP - 710
JO - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
JF - Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology
SN - 0340-5443
IS - 5
ER -