Publication | Closed Access
Courtship and mating behaviour in the parasitoid wasp<i>Cotesia urabae</i>(Hymenoptera: Braconidae): mate location and the influence of competition and body size on male mating success
27
Citations
38
References
2016
Year
Breeding BehaviorMate LocationFitnessEntomologySocial InsectSexual SelectionReproductive BiologyReproduction ResponsePublic HealthCotesia UrabaeBiologyBody SizeNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyNew ZealandHyperparasiteSymbiosisInsect Social BehaviorAnimal BehaviorMale Mating Success
Cotesia urabae is a solitary larval endoparasitoid that was introduced into New Zealand in 2011 as a classical biological control agent against Uraba lugens. A detailed knowledge of its reproductive biology is required to optimize mass rearing efficiency. In this study, the courtship and mating behaviour of C. urabae is described and investigated from a series of experiments, conducted to understand the factors that influence male mating success. Cotesia urabae males exhibited a high attraction to virgin females but not mated females, whereas females showed no attraction to either virgin or mated males. Male mating success was highest in the presence of a male competitor. Also, the time to mate was shorter and copulation duration was longer when a male competitor was present. Larger male C. urabae had greater mating success than smaller males when paired together with a single female. This knowledge can now be utilized to improve mass rearing methods of C. urabae for the future.
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