Cl. Holtmeier et Aj. Zera, DIFFERENTIAL MATING SUCCESS OF MALE WING MORPHS OF THE CRICKET, GRYLLUS RUBENS, The American midland naturalist, 129(2), 1993, pp. 223-233
Genetically marked individuals were used to study differential mating
success between male wing morphs of the cricket, Gryllus rubens. Previ
ous studies of Gryllus rubens and other wing-dimorphic insects have do
cumented that flightless short-winged or wingless females typically at
tain reproductive maturity earlier and oviposit more eggs relative to
their long-winged counterparts. This study was done to determine if fl
ightless males also exhibit enhanced reproductive characteristics. Seg
regation analyses documented the genetic basis of allozymes used to in
fer paternity in subsequent experiments. Control experiments documente
d the absence of effects on mating success independent of wing morph d
ue to (1) the genetic stock from which males were taken; (2) male size
; or (3) female wing morph. Mating trials involving a long-winged male
, a short-winged male and a female of either wing morph documented no
significant differences in the number of progeny sired by male wing mo
rphs. This pattern was true for both the first group of offspring and
for the entire set of offspring produced during a 20-day period. Thus,
in contrast to females, we observed no increase in reproductive outpu
t in males resulting from the loss of the flight apparatus. However, s
ubstantial variance in mating success was observed between males indep
endent of wing morph. This result was likely due to the existence of a
dominance hierarchy and the increased mating success of the dominant
male.