Title: | Temporal manipulation of ejaculate components by newly fertilized Drosophila melanogaster females |
Author(s): | Bubis JA; Degreen HP; Unsell JL; Tompkins L; |
Address: | "Department of Biology, Temple University" |
ISSN/ISBN: | 0003-3472 (Print) 0003-3472 (Linking) |
Abstract: | "Observations of newly mated Drosophila melanogaster females suggest that females control the times at which components of the ejaculate cause behavioural and physiological changes characteristic of fertilized females. Females that were assayed immediately after they mated elicited as much courtship as they did when they were virgins, but were unreceptive to copulation. Within a few minutes of when they disengaged from copulation, most females performed ovipositor extrusion, which has been classified as a rejection behaviour, in response to courting males or males that had previously performed courtship. Most females that were assayed immediately after mating had already ovulated. The females, however, do not begin to lay eggs until 4-6 h after mating, at which time they elicit very little courtship (Scott & Richmond 1985, Anim. Behav., 33, 817-824). Our observations suggest that neither ovipositor extrusion nor male-synthesized pheromones that are transferred to females' cuticles during copulation inhibit males' courtship of newly fertilized females. Thus, males cannot determine that newly fertilized females are unreceptive to copulation. These observations also indicate that the failure of newly fertilized females to mate with males is not a consequence of the females' inability to elicit vigorous courtship. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Copyright 1998 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour" |
Notes: | "PubMed-not-MEDLINEBubis, JA Degreen, HP Unsell, JL Tompkins, L eng England 1998/12/16 Anim Behav. 1998 Jun; 55(6):1637-45. doi: 10.1006/anbe.1997.0723" |