A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Aggregation of Micropterix maschukella moths on inflorescences of common elder: mating at foraging sites (Lepidoptera Micropterigidae)




AuthorsKozlov MV, Zvereva EL

PublisherUNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE

Publication year2006

Journal:Ethology Ecology and Evolution

Journal name in sourceETHOLOGY ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION

Journal acronymETHOL ECOL EVOL

Volume18

Issue2

First page 147

Last page158

Number of pages12

ISSN0394-9370

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/08927014.2006.9522719


Abstract

We investigated mechanisms underlying distribution of an archaic moth, Micropterix maschukella, among inflorescences of the adult's principal food plant, common elder Sambucus nigra. Moths aggregate on certain inflorescences within a plant, preferring inflorescences at early stages of flowering. Females visit inflorescences to feed with pollen; they do not search for conspecific groups and even avoid densely populated inflorescences. In contrast, males visit inflorescences mainly for mating; they feed only seldom and preferentially land on inflorescences with high number of conspecific individuals. Mating was more frequent on inflorescences with higher density of moths. Mating strategy of morphologically archaic Micropterigidae, classified as 'explosive breeding strategy', has significantly deviated from pheromone-mediated location of females which is considered ancestral for the order Lepidoptera.


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