A
male view on reproductive diapause, or coadaption of male
reproductive strategies to diapause in female insects
M. P. Pener
Dept. of Cell and
Animal Biology, The Hebrew Univ., 91904 Jerusalem, Israel
Reproductive adult
diapause (including quiescence) in male insects has been
characterized by many different traits in different species, but
it should be defined as a reversible state of inability of the
male to inseminate receptive females. Male reproductive strategy
is under selection pressure towards a balance between maximum
chances of fertilization of the females' eggs and minimum waste of
energy, as well as minimum predation risk. Therefore, in species
with a female reproductive diapause, male reproductive strategy
must be adapted to female diapause and diapause-related female and
male strategies must be coadapted. In a previous review (Pener,
1992, Chronobiology International, 9:102-113) three types of such
coadapted reproductive strategies were recognized: (1). The female
is receptive in the early part of her diapause when copulation
occurs. The male dies shortly after mating and the female stores
the sperm to fertilize the eggs that develop after female diapause
is terminated. (2). The female is receptive during diapause;
oocyte development is arrested, but mating occurs and the stored
sperm fertilizes the eggs after female diapause is ended.
Reproductive diapause may not occur in the male, or it may exist
in a portion of the males, and the actual situation in a species
may reflect some balance in sperm precedence in that species. (3).
The female is refractory during diapause and the male exhibits
reproductive diapause. The diapause is controlled by similar
environmental cues and the same endocrine mechanism in both sexes,
but male diapause usually terminates before female diapause.
Recent data in the literature indicate that strategy no. 3 may be
quite widespread and there are intermediate cases between
strategies no. 2 and no. 3. Moreover, some further strategies may
exist. Male diapause is under two antagonistic selection pressure;
a male should not waste energy to court refractory females, but
should be ready to mate as soon as the female becomes receptive.
Index terms:
reproductive diapause, male, coadaptations, environmental cues.
Copyright: The copyrights of
this original work belong to the authors (see right-most box in
title table). This abstract appeared in Session 18 –
REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT Symposium and Poster Session,
ABSTRACT BOOK II – XXI-International Congress of Entomology,
Brazil, August 20-26, 2000.
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