Courtship and mate-finding in insects: a comparative approach
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[2023]
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Beschreibung: | xxxi, 624 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9781789248609 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Courtship and mate-finding in insects |b a comparative approach |c Raymond J.C. Cannon |
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650 | 7 | |2 bisacsh |a SCIENCE |a Life Sciences |a Zoology |a Ethology (Animal Behavior) | |
650 | 4 | |a Sexual behavior in animals | |
650 | 4 | |a Courtship in animals | |
650 | 4 | |a Insects - Reproduction | |
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Contents Dedication xv Acknowledgements xvii Illustration Credits xix 1. Introduction 1.1 Content 1.2 Watching and Wondering 1.3 Tinbergen’s Four Questions: Function, Evolution, Causation and Development 1.4 Why Study Courtship Behaviour? 1.5 Observing and Recording Courtship Behaviour 1.6 Limitations and Boundaries 1.7 Process and Format 1.8 How to Present Such a Large Subject 1 1 3 4 4 4 5 6 7 2. Drosophila Courtship Behaviour 2.1 The Genus Drosophila 2.1.1 Courtship behaviour 2.2 Beginnings Case Study 2.1. The family Drosophilidae 2.2.1 Bastock and Manning 2.3 Mutants and Mutations 2.3.1 Genes linked to courtship behaviours 2.3.2 Behavioural elements 2.4 Visual Communication 2.4.1 The female response 2.5 Chemoreception 2.5.1 Tastes good! 2.5.2 Smells good! 2.6 Genes and Behaviour 9 9 9 10 11 12 14 15 15 15 17 17 17 21 21 3. Mate-finding Strategies I: Waiting and Seeking 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Perching and Patrolling or Waiting and Seeking: Two Complementary Strategies? 3.2.1 Factors influencing mate-location tactics 3.3 Territoriality as a Mate-finding Tactic 3.3.1 Factors affecting territoriality in Odonata 3.3.2 Territoriality in butterflies 3.3.3 Territorial hoverflies 3.3.4 Territoriality in bees 3.3.5 Costs and benefits of territorial matingstrategies 3.4 Alternative Mating Tactics: Sneaks and Satellites 3.5 Scrambling for Mates 3.5.1 Scramble competition 3.5.2 Andromorphic female damselflies . 24 24 26 28 32 32 35 36 37 38 39 41 41 42 71
3.6 A Symbolic Territory 3.6.1 Landmark-based mating systems 3.6.2 Lekking paper wasps on symbolic territories 3.6.3 Territorial pompilids on sites devoid of resources 44 44 46 47 4. Mate-finding Strategies II: Hilltopping, Guarding and Excavating 4.1 Hilltopping 4.1.1 Hilltopping in butterflies and moths 4.1.2 Niche segregation 4.1.3 Hilltopping in bees and wasps 4.1.4 Hilltopping in flies 4.1.5 Hilltopping beetles 4.2 Hovering, Guarding and Waiting 4.2.1 Defending a prospective mate 4.2.2 Defending a vital resource 4.2.3 Bumblebees (Bombus species): waiting for females to pass by 4.2.4 Sicilian snail-shell bees: owning the shell 4.3 Bees Digging Up Females 4.3.1 Dawson’s burrowing bee and other Anthophorini 4.3.2 Centrid digger bees 4.3.3 Colletes mining bees 4.4 Wasps Digging Up Females 4.4.1 Sand wasps 4.5 Mating Balls in Bees, Wasps and Stoneflies 4.6 Pupal Mating and Scramble Competition for Emerging Females 4.6.1 Pupal mating in butterflies 4.6.2 Pupal mating in ants 4.6.3 Pupal grasping in crabhole mosquitos 4.6.4 Giant ichneumonid wasp aggregations 4.6.5 Within-host mating in parasitoids 49 49 49 52 54 56 58 59 59 61 61 61 63 63 64 65 66 66 67 68 68 69 70 71 71 5. Mate Calling (Long-range) 5.1 Acoustic Calling 5.1.1 Ultrasonic calling songs of moths 5.1.2 Ultrasonic calling songs of Orthoptera 5.1.3 Acoustic calling behaviour in tephritid fruit flies 5.1.4 Cicada male calling tymbalization songs 5.2 Chemical Calling 5.2.1 Female calling behaviour in moths via pheromones 5.2.2 Female calling in mantids and cockroaches 5.2.3 Female calling in beetles 5.2.4 Calling
behaviour in termites 5.2.5 Male calling in moths 5.2.6 Male calling in cockroaches 5.2.7 Male calling behaviour in dung and burying beetles 5.2.8 Male calling in scorpionflies and other Mecoptera 5.2.9 Calling behaviour in male cerambycid beetles 5.2.10 Long-range attraction in hemipterans 5.2.11 Calling by tephritid fruit flies 74 74 74 76 80 80 81 81 85 86 88 90 91 91 92 93 94 94 6. Swarming and Lekking 6.1 Defining Leks 6.2 Female-preferenceand Hotspot Models 97 97 97 C
6.3 Some Examples of Lekking Insects 6.3.1 Woodwasps 6.3.2 Lekking and swarming in Hepialidae 6.3.3 Aggregations of tiger moths 6.3.4 Lekking mole crickets 6.3.5 Lek-forming drosophilids 6.3.6 Fruit fly leks (Tephritidae) 6.4 Mating Swarms 6.4.1 Ants (Formicidae) 6.4.2 Honeybee drone congregations 6.4.3 Mayfly swarms 6.5 Swarming in Diptera 6.5.1 Soldier fly leks 6.5.2 Love bugs: larger males at the bottom of the swarm 6.5.3 Mosquito swarms 6.5.4 Bobbing and lekking crane flies 6.5.5 Empid dance flies 6.6 Synchronous Choruses 6.6.1 A preference for leading calls 6.6.2 Lek-mating system of periodical cicadas 6.6.3 Synchronous rhythmic flashing of fireflies 6.6.4 Katydid/bush-cricket choruses 7. Cues, Signals and Advertising 7.1 Cues and Signals 7.2 Visual Signals 7.2.1 Wing interference patterns 7.2.2 Light flashes and iridescence 7.3 Auditory Signals 7.4 Olfactory Signals 7.4.1 Scent-marking in bumblebees 7.4.2 Scent-marking in beewolves and other philanthine species 7.4.3 Solitary bee Colletes cunicularius 7.4.4 Territorial marking in castniid moths 7.4.5 Pheromonal marking by paper wasps 7.4.6 Pheromonal marks in fruit flies 7.5 Advertising Signals 7.6 Acoustic Duets 7.6.1 Predation and parasitization risks of signalling 7.7 Acoustic Duets in Insect Mating Systems 7.7.1 Duetting lacewings 7.7.2 Duetting bush-crickets 7.7.3 Vibrational duetting in stoneflies 7.7.4 Courtship duets in mosquitoes 7.7.5 Acoustic duets in psyllids 7.7.6 Three-signal vibratory duets in the pea leafminer 7.8 Calling and Duetting Behaviour in Leafhoppers and Treehoppers 7.8.1 Vibrational duetting
in leafhoppers 7.8.2 Vibrational duetting in treehoppers 7.9 Multimodal Signalling 7.9.1 Sending different signals in different ways 7.9.2 Multiple meanings 7.9.3 Multimodal courtship in calliphorid flies 98 98 99 100 102 102 103 104 105 106 108 109 109 110 110 113 113 114 114 115 116 116 119 119 120 120 121 121 122 122 125 126 126 126 127 127 127 127 128 128 129 134 136 138 139 140 140 142 143 143 145 145 vii
8. Sex Roles, Ornamentation and Role Reversals 8.1 Sex Roles 8.2 Ornaments and Ornamentation 8.2.1 Introduction 8.2.2 Fisherian runaway selection and good genes 8.3 Some Examples of Male Ornaments 8.3.1 Modified fore-tarsi in male dance flies 8.3.2 Leg ‘paddle’ ornaments of mosquito Sabethes cyaneus 8.3.3 Signalling in hover wasps: white stripes display 8.4 Condition-dependent Ornaments in Damselflies 8.4.1 Ornamentation in damselflies 8.4.2 Conspicuous wing colours in calopterygid damselflies 8.4.3 Red wing spots as indicators of quality 8.4.4 Tibial ornamentation in a chlorocyphid damselfly 8.5 Female Ornaments 8.5.1 Female empid dance flies 8.6 Sex Role Reversals 8.6.1 Katydids ·, 8.6.2 Role reversing bush-crickets 8.6.3 Courtship role reversal in the honey locust bean weevil 8.6.4 Zeus bugs (Phoreticovelia spp.) 8.6.5 Cave psocids with a female penis 8.6.6 Incomplete sex role reversal in giant water bugs 148 148 149 149 150 153 153 154 156 158 158 159 159 160 161 162 164 165 165 166 167 168 168 9. Courtship I. Pre-copulatory Courtship Behaviour 9.1 What Is Courtship? 9.2 Courtship Repertoires 9.2.1 Initiation: who takes the lead? 9.2.2 Diversity and plasticity 9.2.3 Pre-, peri- and post-copulatory courtship - terms and definitions 9.3 Insects with No, or Minimal, Courtship Behaviour 9.3.1 Coccinellid beetles: watching and waiting 9.3.2 Scale insects and mealybugs 9.3.3 Aphids climbing on top 9.4 Insects with Very Rapid Courtship 9.4.1 The house fly courtship - over in a flash! 9.4.2 Dragonflies and damselflies 9.5 Insects with Short and Simple Courtship Routines 9.5.1
Pre-copulatory embraces in red mason bees 9.5.2 Grappling robber flies: from attack mode to copulation 9.5.3 Bee fly, fly-bys 9.6 Courtship in Moths: Variable in Complexity Case Study 9.1. Corematal androconial organs in moths and butterflies: abdominal hair-pencils Case Study 9.2. Non-corematal androconial organs on butterflies and moths Case Study 9.3. Coremata: Inflatable tubes 9.7 Simple or Primitive Courtship 9.8 Pre-copulatory Mate Guarding 171 171 171 171 172 172 173 176 177 177 178 178 180 180 180 180 182 182 10. Courtship II. Copulatory and Post-copulatory Courtship Behaviour 10.1 Copulatory Courtship 10.1.1 Copulatory courtship invelvet ants 196 196 196 vili 182 186 190 192 192
Genital titillators and copula tory courtship in bush-crickets Case Study 10.1. Velvet ants (Mutillidae) 10.1.3 Copulatory courtship in chrysomelid beetles 10.1.4 Copulatory courtship in other beetles 10.1.5 Copulatory courtship songs in Australian Drosophila 10.1.6 Copulatory courtship in wasps 10.1.7 Copulatory courtship in flies 10.1.8 Copulatory courtship in bees 10.1.9 Copulatory courtship in lygaeid and coreid bugs: tapping and rubbing 10.2 Post-copulatory Courtship Behaviour 10.3 Post-copulatory Mate Guarding and other Post-insemination Associations 10.3.1 The function of mate guarding 10.3.2 Prolonged copulation 10.3.3 Post-copulatory mate guarding in parasitoid wasps 10.3.4 Post-copulatory aggression 10.4 Courtship Costs and Risks 10.4.1 Inherent costs of courtship 10.4.2 Courtship costs for males 10.4.3 Courtship costs for females 197 198 200 203 204 205 205 206 208 209 209 209 212 216 217 217 217 217 218 Attracting and Stimulating the Other Sex (Near-range Courtship) I. Songs and Instruments 11.1 Acoustic Courtship 11.1.1 Courtship hissing and whistling in cockroaches 11.1.2 Courtship singing in rhinoceros beetles 11.1.3 Bark beetles 11.1.4 Stridulation in other beetles 11.1.5 Courtship songs in crickets and grasshoppers 11.1.6 Copulatory courtship songs of Lutzomyia sand flies 11.1.7 Pulse train and wing vibrations in tephritid fruit flies 11.1.8 Ultrasonic (low-intensity) courtship songs in moths 11.2 Courtship Love Songs in Drosophila 11.2.1 Pulse songs in Drosophila melanogaster 11.2.2 Hearing sounds and sensing vibrations 11.2.3 The love songs of other
Drosophila species Case Study 11.1. The Melanogaster clade 11.2.4 Hawaii: a cradle of diversity 11.2.5 Drosophila suzukii: quivers and toots 11.2.6 Copulatory courtship singing in Drosophila spp. 11.3 Vibrational Courtship 11.3.1 Thoracic vibrations in bees 11.3.2 Substrate-borne vibrations in Drosophila spp. 11.3.3 Leg vibrations in Drosophila prolongata 11.3.4 Trémulation courtship in Conocephalus crickets and other katydids 11.3.5 Substrate drumming in phalangopsid crickets 11.3.6 Vibratory courtship signals in whiteflies 11.3.7 Substrate-borne sound signals in pentatomid bugs 11.3.8 Toking and knocking in tok-tok and deathwatch beetles 11.3.9 Vibrational communication in heelwalkers 220 220 220 221 222 224 225 226 227 228 229 229 232 232 233 234 234 235 236 237 238 238 240 240 242 243 245 246 10.1.2 12. Attracting and Stimulating the Other Sex (Near-range Courtship) Π. Dances and Displays 12.1 Courtship Flights and Dances 12.1.1 Display flights by robber flies (Asilidae) 248 248 248
12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 12.6 12.1.2 Courtship dances in Lispe flies (Muscidae) 12.1.3 Sun dances (Bembix spp.) Courtship Hovering and Display Flights in Odonata 12.2.1 Broad-winged damselflies (Calopterygidae) 12.2.2 Jewels (Chlorocyphidae) 12.2.3 Courtship behaviour of dragonflies Wing Waving and Wing Flicking 12.3.1 Wing waving and wing patterns in Tephritidae 12.3.2 Wing waving and wing scissoring in Drosophila spp. 12.3.3 Courtship behaviour and wing waving in long-legged flies 12.3.4 Wing scissoring and wing vibrations in sarcophagid flies 12.3.5 Wing raising in cockroaches 12.3.6 Wing-flick signals by female cicadas 12.3.7 Wing flicking in seaweed flies (Fucellia tergina) 12.3.8 Wing displays in picture-winged flies (Ulidiidae) 12.3.9 Wing-flapping displays in sand flies 12.3.10 Sparring and wing fluttering in mantispids Wing Fanning and Wing Vibrations 12.4.1 Wing fanning in braconid wasps Case Study 12.1. Vibrational wing fanning in Cotesia wasps (Hymenoptera, Braconidae, Microgastrinae) 12.4.2 Wing fanning in Scuttle flies 12.4.3 Wing fanning in black soldier flies Body Vibrations and Trembling 12.5.1 Courtship trembling in Samoaia attenuata (Drosophilidae) 12.5.2 Body shaking and trémulations in crickets Head Nodding and Head Pushing 12.6.1 Head pushing and foreleg tapping in the common green bottle 12.6.2 Head nodding in Nasonia wasps and other pteromalids (Chalcidoidea, Pteromalidae) 276 12.6.3 Head nodding in other hymenopterans 12.6.4 Antennal beating in Urolepis rufipes 12.6.5 Courtship butting and wing pumping in cockroaches 12.6.6 Courtship head butting and
back tapping in scarabs and longhorn beetles 12.6.7 Antennal boxing in Cardiocondyla ants 13. Attracting and Stimulating the Other Sex (Near-range Courtship) III. Rhythmic Movements 13.1 Rocking, Shaking and Waving 13.1.1 Pumping displays in giant water bugs 13.1.2 Shaking and shivering in reduviid bugs 13.1.3 Rocking and shaking in embiopterans 13.1.4 Rocking and lurching in a chalcid wasp 13.1.5 Courtship bobbing in crane flies 13.1.6 Rocking and vibrating in cockroaches 13.1.7 Rhythmic courtship signals in grasshoppers 13.1.8 Foreleg waving and trembling in mantids 13.2 Tapping and Physical Stimulation 13.2.1 Tapping and rostral rubbing in weevils 13.3 Antennae and Antennal Courtship 13.4 Antennal Courtship in Hymenoptera 13.4.1 Drumming, rubbing and stroking 13.4.2 Antennation 250 252 254 255 257 259 261 261 262 264 265 267 268 269 269 270 271 272 272 273 274 274 274 275 275 276 276 278 279 279 279 280 282 282 282 282 285 285 286 287 290 293 296 296 300 300 300 303
13.4.3 Antennal dipping, waving and coiling 13.4.4 Antennal grabbing, lassoing and pulling 13.4.5 Antennal contacts in bumblebees 13.5 Antennal Courtship in Hemiptera 13.5.1 Antennation in pentatomid bugs 13.5.2 Antennation in shield bugs and water striders 13.5.3 Antennal drumming in mealybugs 13.6 Antennal Courtship in Coleoptera 13.6.1 Antennal rubbing in beetles 13.6.2 Antennation and tibiation in blister beetles 13.6.3 Cerambycid beetles: licking, tapping, and biting 304 305 306 307 307 309 309 309 309 309 312 14. Chemical Communication: Sex Pheromones for Long-range Attraction in Insects 14.1 Insect Pheromones: an Overview 14.2 Sex Pheromones Case Study 14.1. Pheromone-triggered orientation behaviour in Bombyx mori 14.3 Female-produced Volatile Sex Pheromones in Moths 14.3.1 Autodetection 14.3.2 Extracting the signal 14.3.3 Geographical variation in sexual communication 14.3.4 Pheromone polymorphism and reproductive isolation 14.3.5 Pheromone dialects in clearwing moths (Sesiidae) 14.3.6 Detecting the signal 14.3.7 Pyralid moths and the complexities of blend components 14.3.8 Pheromone parsimony 14.3.9 Using the same ingredients in different ways Case Study 14.2. Pheromonetaxonomy 315 315 316 317 319 320 320 321 323 324 325 327 327 328 330 15. Volatile Sex Pheromones in Non-lepidopteran Insects 15.1 Termite Sex Pheromones 15.1.1 Sex-pairing pheromones 15.2 Cockroach Pheromones 15.2.1 Calling by female cockroaches 15.2.2 Calling by male cockroaches 15.3 Dipteran Pheromones 15.3.1 Sand flies 15.3.2 Tephritid fruit flies 15.4 Coleopteran Sex Pheromones 15.4.1 Scarab
beetles 15.4.2 Click beetles 15.4.3 Bark beetles 15.4.4 Non-scolytid curculionids 15.4.5 Coccinellidae 15.4.6 Cerambycid pheromones 15.4.7 Male-produced sex pheromonesin burying beetles 15.5 Hymenopteran Sex Pheromones 15.5.1 Aculeate wasps 15.5.2 Parasitoid wasps 15.5.3 Substrate-borne sex attractantsin‘Nasonia group’ parasitoids 15.6 Pheromones in Miscellaneous Other Insects 15.6.1 Hemiptera 15.6.2 Male-produced sex pheromonesin stink bugs 15.6.3 Male pheromones in mecopteransand neuropterans 333 333 333 334 334 336 336 337 337 339 339 341 341 343 345 345 350 350 350 352 352 353 353 354 356 71
16. Short-range and Contact Pheromones 16.1 Male-produced Short-range Sex Pheromones 16.1.1 Male-produced pheromones in moths 16.1.2 Male-produced pheromones in butterflies 16.2 Female-produced Short-range Pheromones in Insects Other Than Moths 16.2.1 Sex pheromones in aphids 16.2.2 Short-range sex pheromones in hymenopterans 16.2.3 Short-range pheromones in hemipterans 16.3 Contact Pheromones 16.3.1 Cuticular waxes (CHCs) 16.3.2 A trade-off between waterproofing and communication 16.4 Cuticular Sex Pheromones in Different Insect Groups 16.4.1 Lepidoptera 16.4.2 Hymenoptera 16.4.3 Diptera 16.4.4 Coleoptera 16.4.5 Other insects 16.5 Anti-aphrodisiacs, Courtship-inhibiting Pheromones and Chemical Mate Guarding 16.5.1 Courtship-inhibiting pheromones in locusts 16.5.2 Bed bugs: deterring males fromnymphal mating 16.5.3 Lygus hesperus 359 359 359 363 364 364 365 367 369 369 371 372 372 373 375 376 379 379 380 380 381 17. Choosing, Rejecting and Mate Choice 17.1 Mate Recognition, Assessment and Choice 17.1.1 Individuality and mate choice 17.1.2 Mate choices and preferences 17.1.3 Active and passive choices 17.2 Preference and Choosiness 17.2.1 Insect personalities 17.3 Female Mate Choice 17.3.1 Female choice and choosiness 17.3.2 Female preference for repeated and more conspicuous courtship displays 17.4 Some Examples of Female Mate Choices in Different Insects 17.4.1 Female mate choice in moths 17.4.2 Female mate preferences in cicadas 17.4.3 Female mate choice in fireflies 17.4.4 Female choice in orange-winged damselflies 17.4.5 Female choice in back-brooding giant water bugs
17.4.6 Female preference and choosiness in dung beetles 17.4.7 Orchid bees - master perfumiers in a fragrance market 17.4.8 Female mate choice in cockroaches 17.4.9 Female mate choice in Polistes paper wasps 17.4.10 Mate-deterring signals and female choice in reduviid bugs 17.4.11 Earwigs: do females like forceps? 17.5 Male Mate Choices 17.5.1 Male choices and preferences 17.5.2 Mate choice in Drosophila spp. 17.5.3 Mate choice in stalk-eyed flies Case Study 17.1. Courtship behaviour and mate recognition in swallowtail butterflies 383 383 384 386 386 387 388 389 389 390 392 392 393 394 394 394 395 396 398 399 400 401 402 402 403 404 404
18. Sexual Conflicts and Female Rejection Behaviour 18.1 Grasping, Clasping and Forcing: Pre-mating Struggles and Sexual Conflicts 18.1.1 Introduction 18.1.2 Hooked elytral tips in Pteroptyx fireflies 18.1.3 Grasping behaviour in carpenter bees, Xylocopa 18.1.4 Eye coverings in bees and wasps 18.1.5 Wing grasping in sabethine mosquitoes 18.1.6 Suction cups in water beetles 18.1.7 Grasping in tiger beetles 18.1.8 Suckers and mating marks in ground beetles 18.1.9 Sex combs and genital holding devices in Drosophila 18.1.10 Mate-holding devices in cockroaches 18.1.11 Forceps and paired penises in earwigs 18.1.12 Genital claspers 18.2 Cannibalism 18.2.1 Mantids: the ultimate trade-off 18.3 Traumatic Matings 18.3.1 Traumatic insertions 18.3.2 Notai clamps 18.4 Female Actions in Determining Mating Success 18.4.1 Compliance behaviour and receptivity in response to courtship 18.4.2 Social learning and mate choice 18.4.3 Female brush-off behaviour 18.4.4 Female rejection behaviours 18.4.5 Female refusal displays in Odonata 18.4.6 Sexual death feigning to avoid mating 18.4.7 Female kicking and bucking in seaweed flies 18.4.8 Female rejection behaviour and mate choice in ladybirds 18.4.9 Rejection and refusal in miscellaneous insects 407 407 407 408 409 409 411 413 413 415 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 421 422 424 424 424 425 425 427 427 427 429 431 19. Courtship Feeding and Nuptial Gifts 19.1 The Role of Nuptial Gifts 19.2 Endogenous Oral Gifts 19.2.1 Mating trophallaxis in flies 19.2.2 Courtship feeding in crickets: tibial spur-chewing 19.2.3 Courtship feeding in crickets: metanotal
and tegminal secretions 19.2.4 Substrate drumming and nuptial gifts in phalangopsid crickets 19.2.5 Hindwing consumption in crickets 19.2.6 Cockroaches: females feeding on male tergal secretions 19.2.7 Nuptial gifts in the ladybird beetle, Harmonia dimidiata 19.2.8 Zoraptera feeding on a secretion of a cephalic gland 19.3 Exogenous Oral Gifts 19.3.1 Nuptial gifts and nuptial feeding in scorpionflies 19.3.2 Nuptial gifts in hanging flies 19.4 Endogenous Genital Gifts 19.4.1 Cantharidin: secretory offerings of cantharidin to females 19.4.2 Intraspecific transfer of cantharidin in beetles 436 436 438 438 440 441 442 443 444 445 445 446 446 448 448 448 449 20. Discussion and Conclusions 20.1 What’s the Use of Studying Courtship Behaviour? 20.1.1 Taxonomic uses 20.1.2 Courtship bioassays 20.1.3 Anthropogenic chemicals as disruptors of pheromone communication 451 451 451 452 453 xiii
20.2 Applying Research on Mating Behaviourand Intrasexual Communication 20.2.1 Behavioural modification 20.2.2 Pheromones, mating disruption and early detection 20.2.3 Sterile insect technique 20.2.4 Monitoring invasive species and those of conservation concern 20.3 Contrasts and Comparisons 20.3.1 Laboratory versus field 20.3.2 Why do complex courtship displays exist in some species but not others? 20.3.3 Why are courtship displays lacking in some male-female interactions but present in others? 20.3.4 Are there common themes? 20.3.5 How does courtship behaviour evolve? 20.3.6 Why is mating so rarely observed in some species? 20.3.7 The known, and unknown, unknowns 454 454 455 456 457 458 458 459 462 463 465 465 466 21. Epilogue: A Courtship Duet. Drosophila melanogaster 21.1 Orientation 21.2 Tapping 21.3 Singing * 21.4 Licking 21.5 Attempted Copulation 21.6 Copulation 468 468 469 469 470 471 471 Glossary 473 Video and Audio Web Links 481 References 487 Index 609 xiv |
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discipline_str_mv | Biologie |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV049047753 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T22:20:43Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T09:53:45Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781789248609 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034310162 |
oclc_num | 1401176480 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | xxxi, 624 Seiten Illustrationen |
publishDate | 2023 |
publishDateSearch | 2023 |
publishDateSort | 2023 |
publisher | CABI Publishing |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Cannon, Raymond Julian Conway Verfasser (DE-588)1209580764 aut Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach Raymond J.C. Cannon Wallingford CABI Publishing [2023] xxxi, 624 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier bicssc Zoology & animal sciences bisacsh SCIENCE Life Sciences Zoology Ethology (Animal Behavior) Sexual behavior in animals Courtship in animals Insects - Reproduction Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd rswk-swf Balz (DE-588)4219459-3 gnd rswk-swf Sexualverhalten (DE-588)4116485-4 gnd rswk-swf Life Sciences: Zoology Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 s Balz (DE-588)4219459-3 s Sexualverhalten (DE-588)4116485-4 s DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF 9781789248616 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, EPUB 9781789248623 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034310162&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Cannon, Raymond Julian Conway Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach bicssc Zoology & animal sciences bisacsh SCIENCE Life Sciences Zoology Ethology (Animal Behavior) Sexual behavior in animals Courtship in animals Insects - Reproduction Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Balz (DE-588)4219459-3 gnd Sexualverhalten (DE-588)4116485-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4027110-9 (DE-588)4219459-3 (DE-588)4116485-4 |
title | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach |
title_auth | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach |
title_exact_search | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach |
title_exact_search_txtP | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach |
title_full | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach Raymond J.C. Cannon |
title_fullStr | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach Raymond J.C. Cannon |
title_full_unstemmed | Courtship and mate-finding in insects a comparative approach Raymond J.C. Cannon |
title_short | Courtship and mate-finding in insects |
title_sort | courtship and mate finding in insects a comparative approach |
title_sub | a comparative approach |
topic | bicssc Zoology & animal sciences bisacsh SCIENCE Life Sciences Zoology Ethology (Animal Behavior) Sexual behavior in animals Courtship in animals Insects - Reproduction Insekten (DE-588)4027110-9 gnd Balz (DE-588)4219459-3 gnd Sexualverhalten (DE-588)4116485-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Zoology & animal sciences SCIENCE Life Sciences Zoology Ethology (Animal Behavior) Sexual behavior in animals Courtship in animals Insects - Reproduction Insekten Balz Sexualverhalten |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034310162&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT cannonraymondjulianconway courtshipandmatefindingininsectsacomparativeapproach |