Effects of Flight on Reproductive Development in Long-Winged Female Crickets (<i>Velarifictorus aspersus</i> Walker; Orthoptera: Gryllidae) with Differences in Flight Behavior

A trade-off between the capacity for flight and reproduction has been documented extensively in wing polymorphic female insects, thereby supporting the possible fitness gain due to flightlessness. However, most of these studies were conducted without considering the effect of flight behavior. In the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ye-Song Ren, Bin Zhang, Yang Zeng, Dao-Hong Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023-01-01
Series:Insects
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/14/1/79
Description
Summary:A trade-off between the capacity for flight and reproduction has been documented extensively in wing polymorphic female insects, thereby supporting the possible fitness gain due to flightlessness. However, most of these studies were conducted without considering the effect of flight behavior. In the present study, we assessed the flight duration by long-winged (LW) females in the cricket species <i>Velarifictorus aspersus</i> on different days after adult emergence and examined the effect of flight on ovarian development in LW females with different flight capacities. Our results showed that the flight capacity increased with age and peaked after 5 days. In addition, the flight capacity varied among individuals, where most LW females could only take short flights (sustained flight time < 10 min) and only a few individuals could take long flights (sustained flight time > 20 min). In LW female crickets demonstrating only short flights, repeated flying for 30 or 60 min significantly promoted reproductive development. However, in those capable of long flights, reproductive development was affected only after a flight of 60 min. The flight muscles degraded after the start of rapid reproduction in those with both short and long flights. Our results indicated that the critical flight time for switching from flight to reproduction varies among LW <i>V. aspersus</i> female crickets with polymorphic flight behavior.
ISSN:2075-4450