2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10905-016-9562-4
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Female Age Determines Remating Behavior in Wild Mexican Fruit Flies

Abstract: Male and female age are important factors that can influence mating and remating behavior. Females can discriminate against or prefer older males, but there have been relatively fewer studies on how female and male age influence female remating. Here we showed in wild flies of the Mexican fruit fly Anastrepha ludens (Loew), that when females were given a choice between males of different ages, younger females preferred to mate with younger males over older males, while older females were less selective. Also, … Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…In the other instance, young females (10-d old) preferred young males (10-d old) over old males (30- or 40-d old) even though calling levels were similar between the age groups ( Shelly et al 2011 ). Interestingly, in this latter study, old females (40-d old) mated randomly with males of different ages (see also Abraham et al 2016 for similar results). As in A .…”
Section: Questions and Answerssupporting
confidence: 56%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the other instance, young females (10-d old) preferred young males (10-d old) over old males (30- or 40-d old) even though calling levels were similar between the age groups ( Shelly et al 2011 ). Interestingly, in this latter study, old females (40-d old) mated randomly with males of different ages (see also Abraham et al 2016 for similar results). As in A .…”
Section: Questions and Answerssupporting
confidence: 56%
“…In A . ludens , ‘young’ females (13- to 23-d old) mated preferentially with ‘middle-aged’ males (28- to 39-d old) over ‘young’ males (18- to 23-d old) in two separate studies ( Pérez-Staples et al 2010 , Abraham et al 2016 ). However, females did not gain fitness benefits (in terms of increased fecundity, fertility, or longevity) by selecting the older males ( Pérez-Staples et al 2010 ).…”
Section: Questions and Answersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this elevated remating tendency of 1‐day post‐mating females was closely linked to effects of male age; older males more often failed to induce sexual inhibition in their mates over this time frame but over longer periods were as effective as younger males. This is the first report of male age‐dependent ability to induce sexual inhibition in Q‐fly, while female age‐dependent sexual inhibition was observed in wild Mexican fruit flies (Abraham, Contreras‐Navarro, & Pérez‐Staples, ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…Mating latency is shorter for older females, which are less selective (Abraham et al , ) and may be eager to mate as their reproductive opportunities diminish with age. Copula duration is longer for older females, which is consistent with studies on older wild females (Abraham et al , ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%