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Edible Love Gifts may Influence Female Behavior

 

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Researchers at Britain's University of Exeter and the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology say that edible gifts given by male crickets to their female partners during mating contain unique proteins which could affect the females' behavior. The study was published in the journal PLOS ONE.

Many insects mate by transferring their sperm in a capsule, or ampulla. In decorated crickets, Gryllodes sigillatus, an additional edible present, known as a nuptial gift, is offered to the female during mating in the form of a large gelatinous ball of protein attached to the ampulla which the female eats while the sperm are being transferred. Scientists believe that some of the proteins contained in the nuptial gift prevent digestive enzymes in the female's gut from breaking down other active proteins in the gift. These protected proteins may then alter her reproductive physiology and make her less likely to mate with further males, according to researchers.

"It has long been thought that the purpose of the edible love gift was so that male crickets could be sure their sperm wouldn't be eaten by the female. However our study suggests that the story may actually be more complex and that the gift not only functions to feed the female but it may also affect her behavior," said professor Richard Ffrench-Constant from the University of Exeter.

The researchers analyzed the proteins contained in the nuptial gift to determine their molecular structure and function. They found that not only are some of the proteins protected from being broken down by enzymes, but they bear a striking resemblance to growth factor proteins known to exist in other insects. Nuptial gifts occur in several insect species in various forms including nicely wrapped dead bugs collected by males, various body secretions, body parts or even the male's entire body.

In the decorated cricket, the female detaches the gelatinous nuptial gift, which is made by the male, from the sperm capsule and feasts during sperm transfer. There is a direct correlation between the time needed for a female to consume the nuptial gift and the time required for complete transfer of sperm from the ampulla to the female's sperm storage organ. The larger the gift, the longer the ampulla attachment time and so the greater the male's chance of paternity.

Future research will investigate the exact role that the proteins in the nuptial gift may play in altering the reproductive physiology of the female cricket.


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