Abstract
The courtship pattern of Tipula oleracea consists of a complex series of reciprocal stimulus–response reactions. The sequence of the reactions (grabbing, mounting, pinning, searching, kissing, and sliding reaction) is rigidly fixed, whereas the procedure of a reaction exhibits a certain degree of flexibility. Courtship may be broken off at any point between the males' grabbing response and the actual copulation if a reaction cannot be completed, a sign stimulus is missing, or a sign stimulus is given at the wrong time.The grabbing and the pinning reactions of the stimulus–response pattern have a specific "filter effect" leading to the copulation of active males with unfertilized, receptive females and preventing a mating between two males or between a male and a fertilized or too young female. The grabbing reaction is also involved in the prevention of an interspecific mating.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
29 articles.
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