“…Female rejection behaviour was considered the main dependent variable for two reasons: (i) it was proved to be effective and, thus, imposes a cost for the female who performs it, and (ii) it exclusively reflects the response of the female (since what occurs afterwards, not only depends on the female resistance but also on the male persistence). Female rejection behaviour comprises the following stereotyped behaviours which prevent or delay copula (Pompilio et al, ): (a) abdominal movements: the female shakes her legs and body up and down, impeding the lateral positioning of the male; (b) evasion: the female runs away once the male jump or mount her, avoiding his physical contact; (c) stridulation: once in contact with the male the female rubs the end of her rostrum against the prosternal groove. The stridulatory vibrations migrate from the female to male's body, and then, he stops the copulatory attempt (as already observed in Manrique and Schilman, ); (d) flattening: the female pushes her body against the substrate, impeding the correct positioning of the male's legs; (e) stamping: the female responds to the male mounting by bringing their legs down forcibly on the ground, impeding the male stability; and (f) abdominal raising: once the male mounts the female, she elevates and keeps the abdomen up, avoiding contact of the genitalia.…”