Artículos de revistas
Experimental demonstration of possible cryptic female choice on male tsetse fly genitalia
Fecha
2009Registro en:
www.elsevier.com/locate/jinsphys
0022-1910
ESSN: 1879-1611
10.1016/j.jinsphys.2009.07.001
Autor
Briceño Lobo, Daniel
Eberhard Chabtree, William G.
Institución
Resumen
A possible explanation for one of the most general trends in animal evolution – rapid divergent evolution
of animal genitalia – is that male genitalia are used as courtship devices that influence cryptic female
choice. But experimental demonstrations of stimulatory effects of male genitalia on female reproductive
processes have generally been lacking. Previous studies of female reproductive physiology in the tsetse
fly Glossina morsitans suggested that stimulation during copulation triggers ovulation and resistance to
remating. In this study we altered the form of two male genital structures that squeeze the female’s
abdomen rhythmically in G. morsitans centralis and induced, as predicted, cryptic female choice against
the male: sperm storage decreased, while female remating increased. Further experiments in which we
altered the female sensory abilities at the site contacted by thesemale structures during copulation, and
severely altered or eliminated the stimuli the male received from this portion of his genitalia, suggested
that the effects of genital alteration on sperm storage were due to changes in tactile stimuli received by
the female, rather than altered male behavior. These data support the hypothesis that sexual selection by
cryptic female choice has been responsible for the rapid divergent evolution of male genitalia in Glossina;
limitations of this support are discussed. It appears that a complex combination of stimuli trigger female
ovulation, sperm storage, and remating, and different stimuli affect different processes in G. morsitans,
and that the same processes are controlled differently in G. pallidipes. This puzzling diversity in female
triggering mechanisms may be due to the action of sexual selection.