Abstract
This paper describes the hunting and mating behaviour of two species of
Harpobittacus which are endemic to Australia. The larvae of H. australis, and probably
also those of H. nigriceps, are scavengers, whereas their adults are rapacious predators.
Their prey include a wide variety of soft-bodied insects and spiders.
In the field only the male was observed to hunt and capture its prey with its
powerful raptorial hindlegs. After taking a short meal, the male curves its abdomen
to evert two intertergal vesicles between segments 6 and 7 and segments 7 and 8. These
vesicles contract and expand in a slow rhythmic motion and discharge a sex pheromone
which attracts the female. As soon as copulation is established the male passes the prey
to the female which feeds on it as a nuptial meal while mating is in progress. Both sexes
mate several times daily throughout their entire lifetimes.
The hunting and mating behaviour of the two species differ only in that the nuptial
meal remains in the possession of the male H. australis, the same prey being used for
several mating actions with different females. In H. nigriceps, the meal is in possession
of the female which discards it just prior to the termination of copulation. In this
species a fresh nuptial meal is provided by the male on each mating occasion. It is
suggested that similar mating behaviour may occur in other genera of Bittacidae,
notably in the worldwide genus Bittacus.
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
37 articles.
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