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Mate choice in the predaceous mite <i>Phytoseiulus persimilis</i>: evidence of self‐referent phenotype matching?
31
Citations
34
References
2004
Year
BiologyBreeding BehaviorKin RecognitionFitnessNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyBreedingSelf‐referent Phenotype MatchingMate ChoiceEvolutionary GeneticsMating PsychologySexual SelectionClose InbreedingReproductive BiologyChoice ExperimentsPublic HealthAnimal BehaviorKin Selection
Abstract Close inbreeding may have negative fitness effects. Consequently, organisms have evolved various mechanisms, which enable them to avoid close inbreeding. In no‐choice and choice experiments we assessed whether the predaceous mite Phytoseiulus persimilis Athias‐Henriot (Acari: Phytoseiidae) avoids close inbreeding by kin recognition. No‐choice experiments demonstrated that virgin females more readily accept unrelated males than they accept related ones, which suggests a female preference for unrelated mates. Because each female had been reared in isolation prior to experiments, females most likely imprinted on themselves, and later used self‐referent phenotype matching to assess potential mating partners. In contrast, neither female nor male choice experiments indicated a preference. Analyses of female and male behavior revealed that in choice experiments, female preference for unrelated males was probably confounded by male competition and/or altered by the different ecological context posed by choice experiments.
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