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Density-dependent mating behaviors reduce male mating harassment in locusts.


ABSTRACT: Male mating harassment may occur when females and males do not have the same mating objectives. Communal animals need to manage the costs of male mating harassment. Here, we demonstrate how desert locusts in dense populations reduce such conflicts through behaviors. In transient populations (of solitarious morphology but gregarious behavior), we found that nongravid females occupied separate sites far from males and were not mating, whereas males aggregated on open ground (leks), waiting for gravid females to enter the lekking sites. Once a male mounted a gravid female, no other males attacked the pair; mating pairs were thereby protected during the vulnerable time of oviposition. In comparison, solitarious locusts displayed a balanced sex ratio in low-density populations, and females mated irrespective of their ovarian state. Our results indicate that the mating behaviors of desert locusts are density dependent and that sex-biased behavioral group separation may minimize the costs of male mating harassment and competition.

SUBMITTER: Maeno KO 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8594575 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Density-dependent mating behaviors reduce male mating harassment in locusts.

Maeno Koutaro Ould KO   Piou Cyril C   Ould Ely Sidi S   Ould Mohamed Sid'Ahmed S   Jaavar Mohamed El Hacen MEH   Ghaout Saïd S   Babah Ebbe Mohamed Abdallahi Ould MAO  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20211001 42


Male mating harassment may occur when females and males do not have the same mating objectives. Communal animals need to manage the costs of male mating harassment. Here, we demonstrate how desert locusts in dense populations reduce such conflicts through behaviors. In transient populations (of solitarious morphology but gregarious behavior), we found that nongravid females occupied separate sites far from males and were not mating, whereas males aggregated on open ground (leks), waiting for gra  ...[more]

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