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"Density-dependent male mating harassment, female resistance and male mimicry"
Thomas P. Gosden and Erik I. Svensson


male blue-tailed damselfly matting with his doppelganger

A male mating with his female doppelganger (photo: Erik Svensson) 

Females in the blue-tailed damselfly (Ischnura elegans) occur in three different inherited color forms: green, red, and blue, with the blue form looking confusingly similar to males, perhaps to avoid repeated excessive sexual harassment. By dusting the males with a fluorescent powder, the authors monitored both the intensity of male mating harassment and the number of matings of the three female forms. The avoidance through male mimicry only seems to benefit the females when their “more attractive” sisters are at higher densities.

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Next, the researchers evaluated whether this color change might make any difference to the birds. They put stuffed birds of either color into the territories of live flycatchers. Flycatchers are not bothered by most foreign birds, but they will attack potential rivals of the same species. Black bird decoys drew angry responses from black birds but little reaction from brown-belly birds and vice versa, Uy and his colleagues report in the August issue of The American Naturalist.

February 1998

Volume 151, Number 2
Am Nat 1998. Vol. 151, pp. 148–156
0003-0147/1998/5102-0004$15.00.
DOI: 10.1086/286108

A Genetic Polymorphism Maintained by Natural Selection in a Temporally Varying Environment

Daniel J. Borash

Allen G. Gibbs

Amitabh Joshi

Laurence D. Mueller

Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, California 92697–2525

ABSTRACT

Environments that are crowded with larvae of the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, exhibit a temporal deterioration in quality as waste products accumulate and food is depleted. We show that natural selection in these environments can maintain a genetic polymorphism with one group of genotypes specializing on the early part of the environment and a second group specializing on the late part. These specializations involve trade‐offs in fitness components. The early types emerge first from crowded cultures and have high larval feeding rates, which are positively correlated with competitive ability but exhibit lower absolute viability than the late phenotype, especially in food contaminated with the nitrogenous waste product, ammonia. The late emerging types have reduced feeding rates but higher absolute survival under conditions of severe crowding and high levels of ammonia. Organisms that experience temporal variation within a single generation are not uncommon, and this model system provides some of the first insights into the evolutionary forces at work in these environments.

Received April 28, 1997; accepted August 20, 1997

Keywords

Drosophila melanogaster density‐dependent selection nitrogen wastes ammonia urea

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