A. Hoikkala et L. Suvanto, Male courtship song frequency as an indicator of male mating success in Drosophila montana, J INSECT B, 12(5), 1999, pp. 599-609
Drosophila montana females have been found to prefer overwintered males wit
h short and dense (high-frequency) sound pulses in the wild. In the present
study males producing high-frequency song succeeded in their courtship mor
e often than males producing low-frequency song in mate-choice experiments.
Male mating success correlated with the carrier frequency of the male song
recorded after, but not before, an "artificial winter" (flies kept 6 month
s at 4 degrees C). The finding that female preference is based on a male so
ng trait changing considerably during overwintering suggests that this trai
t may reflect the viability and condition of the males during the mating se
ason of the flies in spring.