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Re-copulation and post-copulatory mate guarding increase immediate female reproductive output in the dragonfly Nannophya pygmaea Rambur
Authors:Y Tsubaki  Michael T Siva-Jothy  Tomohiro Ono
Institution:(1) Laboratory of Wildlife Conservation, National Institute for Environmental Studies, 305 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Japan;(2) Department of Animal and Plant Sciences, University of Sheffield, S10 2UQ Sheffield, U.K.;(3) Laboratory of Biology, Kinjo Gakuin University, 463 Moriyama, Nagoya, Japan
Abstract:After copulation, male Nannophya pygmaea dragonflies mate guard by hovering over ovipositing females and repelling conspecific males. Copulation is not always a prerequisite for oviposition in the females of this species because females can store the sperm received during previous visits/copulations. An oviposition ldquoepisoderdquo consists of several ldquoboutsrdquo of oviposition separated by periods of perching. We conducted two types of male-removal experiments to examine the effects of mating and post-copulatory mate guarding on the oviposition behaviour of females. In the first experiment, we removed all males from the habitat to eliminate the effect of re-copulation, mate-guarding and harassment by males. In the second experiment, we removed males immediately after copulation to eliminate the effects of guarding and other post-copulatory male-female interactions. We compared these experimental data with data obtained under natural conditions. The dipping rate in an oviposition bout was not influenced by copulation or guarding. However, guarded females made more dips per episode than did solitary females. The proportion of time actually spent ovipositing (total bout duration/oviposition episode duration) of guarded females was higher than that of solitary females. Solitary females often oviposited in more than one territorial site, while guarded females usually oviposited within a single territorial site during an oviposition episode. Because males tend to hold territories at sites where egg survival is high, guarded females (and the male guardian) benefit from guarding in terms of egg hatchability. The possible benefits for solitary females are discussed.
Keywords:Dragonfly  Re-copulation  Mate guarding  Oviposition  Site selection
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