نتایج جستجو برای: copulation

تعداد نتایج: 1453  

2013
Wen Zhong Baozhen Hua

Sexual conflict during copulation may drive morphological and behavioral evolution in insects. Although nuptial feeding behaviour is well studied in Panorpa, whether this behaviour is universal in Panorpidae remains unknown. The scorpionfly Neopanorpa longiprocessa Hua & Chou, 1997 was investigated for its mating behaviour, functional morphology of the notal organ, and external genitalia using ...

2017
Romain P. Boisseau Shawn M. Wilder

Sexual cannibalism is often set apart from other forms of cannibalism; however, no studies have directly compared the fitness consequences of these 2 types of cannibalism. Here, we compared the consequences of cannibalism of a male by a female outside the context of mating (referred to as nonsexual cannibalism) and within the context of mating (referred to as sexual cannibalism) for the propens...

2018
Danilo O Carvalho Samira Chuffi Rafaella S Ioshino Isabel C S Marques Regina Fini Maria Karina Costa Helena R C Araújo André L Costa-da-Silva Bianca Burini Kojin Margareth L Capurro

Ades aegypti is the most important arbovirus vector in the world, and new strategies are under evaluation. Biological studies mentioning the occurrence of a second mate in Aedes aegypti can interfere with vector control program planning, which involves male mosquito release technique. This study presents different experiments to show the occurrence of mixed progeny. Mixed male crosses (using a ...

Journal: :Integrative and comparative biology 2002
D A Kelly

Inflatable penises have evolved independently at least four times in amniotes, specifically in mammals, turtles, squamates, and the archosaurs. Males in these lineages therefore share the functional problem of building a penis out of soft and flexible tissues that can increase its flexural stiffness and resist bending during copulation. Research on penile erectile tissues in mammals and turtles...

2018
Robert Perger Gonzalo D Rubio

Fly resemblance in arthropods is much less common than e.g., resemblance to ants or wasps, and has been mainly observed in beetles. Putative fly mimicry in arachnids has been reported only from the jumping spider genus Saitis. However, recent literature has attributed the fly-resembling characteristics in Saitis to sexual signalling during courtship. The lack of observation of fly mimicry in sp...

Journal: :Apidologie 2022

Abstract Behavioural courtship display and size of males are two attributes often used by females to select a mating partner. According sexual selection, such traits importance, because bigger male or displaying better could enhance the possibility transmit her genes following generations via offspring. In Hymenoptera as in solitary bees, it is known that can assess quality add this information...

Journal: :Journal of comparative psychology 2011
William F McKibbin Valerie G Starratt Todd K Shackelford Aaron T Goetz

Female extrapair copulation (EPC) can be costly to a woman's long-term romantic partner. If a woman has copulated recently with a man other than her long-term partner, her reproductive tract may contain the sperm of both men, initiating sperm competition (whereby sperm from multiple males compete to fertilize an egg). Should the woman become pregnant, her long-term partner is at risk of cuckold...

Journal: :Hormones and behavior 2001
S K Putnam J Du S Sato E M Hull

The medial preoptic area (MPOA) is an important integrative site for male sexual behavior. We have reported an increase in dopamine (DA) release in the MPOA of male rats shortly before and during copulation. Postcastration loss of copulatory ability mirrored the loss of the precopulatory DA response to an estrous female. The present study investigated the time courses of restoration, rather tha...

2007
CATHERINE CROCKFORD DOROTHY L. CHENEY

Many animals appear to monitor changes in other individuals’ dominance ranks and social relationships and to track changes in them. However, it is not known whether they also track changes in very transient relationships. Rapid recognition of a temporary separation between a dominant male and a sexually receptive female, for example, should be adaptive in species where subordinate males use opp...

Journal: :Biology letters 2011
Zanna Clay Simone Pika Thibaud Gruber Klaus Zuberbühler

During mating events, females of many primate species produce loud and distinct vocalizations known as 'copulation calls'. The adaptive significance of these signals is considered to be in promoting the caller's direct reproductive success. Here, we investigated copulation calling in bonobos (Pan paniscus), a species in which females produce these vocalizations during sexual interactions with p...

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