Data from: Adaptive significance of long mating with repeated intromissions in Zygogramma bicolorata
Data files
Feb 25, 2025 version files 86.19 KB
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Data_file_2.xls
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README.md
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Abstract
Long matings are abundant in insects despite the range of the costs involved. The causes and consequences of the evolution of long mating remain an interesting problem for behavioural ecologists. We studied extraordinarily long mating that involves repeated intromissions interspersed with latent periods in the Parthenium beetle (Zygogramma bicolorata). We conducted a series of interrupted mating assays to examine the fitness consequences of different components of this curious mating behaviour. We tested multiple adaptive hypotheses concerning male fertility and competitive ability. We found that sperm transfer and fertility did not exhibit a linear increase with the number of intromissions. There was also no evidence of nutrient transfer by the males. Interestingly, our results showed that both sexes suffered a significant cost of long mating. Further, female remating behaviour was found to be modulated by the length of previous mating. Additionally, males were observed performing a curious leg rubbing behaviour during the inter-intromission latent period, putatively serving as a copulatory courtship function that reduced female resistance to the continuance of mating. Therefore, we show that while the long mating may still serve a mate guarding role, there are additional fitness effects of such behaviour that need careful consideration. Our study provides insights into the adaptive significance of long mating and its fitness consequences.
Key to reading the data file:
Data used in the manuscript titled
"Adaptive significance of long mating with repeated intromissions in Zygogramma bicolorata" can be found in the spreadsheet file named 'Data file".
Data of different traits have been separated in different tabs.
Sperm transfer, Fecundity and Hatchability data are from Experiment 1.
Remating and Effect of time of the day data are from Experiment 2.
Starvation survival and Egg size data are from Experiment 3.
Leg rubbing data is from Experiment 4.
Data are arranged vertically, with parameters measured/factors separated in columns.
Abbreviations used in the spreadsheet and remarks:
Sperm transfer (sheet: sperm_count)
id: Female identity
trt: Treatments
total_sperm: Total number of sperm estimated from spermatheca, bursa copulatrix and oviduct
Fecundity (sheet: fecundity)
id: Female identity
trt: Treatments
fsum: Cumulative fecundity
Hatchability (sheet: hatchability)
id: Female identity
trt: Treatments
hsum: Total number of eggs hatched
fsum: Cumulative fecundity
meanhat: Mean hatchability
olre: Observation level random effect
Remating (sheet: remating)
id: Female identity
trt: Treatments
ml: Remating latency/Mounting latency (Minute)
il: Intromission latency (Minute)
md: Remating duration (Minute)
C41, P32 (C30); C11, C42, P37 (C50); C23, P33 (Control) did not start intromission during remating.
Effect of time of the day (Sheet: remating_control_time)
time: time of first mating set
ml: Mounting latency (Minute)
md: Mating duration (Minute)
Egg size
day: Day 20 post-mating when the eggs were measured
trt: Treatments
es: Egg size (micrometer square)
Starvation survival
id: Individual identity
trt: Treatments
time: Days survived under starvation
status: Censoring
sex: sex of the individual
Leg rubbing
id: Pair identity
trt: Treatments
ml: Mounting latency (Minute)
il: Intromission latency (Minute)
md: Mating duration (Minute)
kpm: Kicks per minute
mean_id_sec: Mean intromission duration (Second)
mean_il_sec: Mean inter-intromission latency (Second)
The beetles were brought to the laboratory to setup a breeding population. Once established, the experiments were conducted by setting up mating trials. Most of the experiments were conducted in the laboratory. A few experiments, especially for mating behaviour characterization, were done outside the laboratory - under semi-natural setup.
- Pal, Rabi Sankar; Bhowmick, Anirban; Naik, Kunmun; Nandy, Bodhisatta (2024). Adaptive Significance of Long Mating With Repeated Intromissions in Zygogramma bicolorata. Ethology. https://doi.org/10.1111/eth.13525
- Pal, Rabi Sankar; Nandy, Bodhisatta (2024). Long mounting with repeated copulations inZygogramma bicolorata: A test of adaptive significance of a curious mating behaviour [Preprint]. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.01.10.574980
