| Literature DB >> 25098756 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Female mate choice after mating is a strong force in sexual selection and could lead to coevolution of mating traits between the sexes. How females of different genotypes respond to substances in the male ejaculate should be mediated by females' mate choices. Monoamines regulate animal physiology and behavior, including the post-mating behavior of females of the adzuki bean beetle, Callosobruchus chinensis (Coleoptera: Bruchidae). This study examined differences in females' response to four monoamines (dopamine, octopamine, tyramine, serotonin) between strains from different populations of C. chinensis.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25098756 PMCID: PMC4360256 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-014-0172-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Results of a generalized linear model testing the effects of strain and monoamine treatment on female receptivity
| 705.645 | − | − | − | |
| Treatment | 4 | 86.270 | < 0.0001 | |
| Strain | 3 | 7.711 | 0.0524 | |
| Strain × treatment | 12 | 21.295 | 0.0462 |
Figure 1Effects of monoamines on female mating receptivity. Receptivity of Callosobruchus chinensis females of strains jC-S, isC, akC02, and mC to mating 3–5 h after injection with dopamine, octopamine, tyramine, serotonin, or Milli-Q water (control). Bars labeled with the same letters do not differ significantly within a given strain by the method of Benjamini and Hochberg [53] with a false discovery rate at P < 0.05. The numbers in parentheses show the sample size (from left to right, jC-S, isC, akC02, and mC).
Results of repeated-measures two-way ANOVA of eggs laid by females of four strains in the monoamine injection experiment
| Between-subject | |||
| Treatment | 4 | 8.746 | < 0.0001 |
| Strain | 3 | 15.593 | < 0.0002 |
| Treatment × strain | 12 | 1.948 | 0.0274 |
| Error | 19 | 5.389 | |
| Within-subject | |||
| Day | 1.92 | 4888.741 | < 0.0001* |
| Day × Treatment | 7.67 | 5.503 | < 0.0001* |
| Day × strain | 5.77 | 13.821 | < 0.0001* |
| Day × treatment × | 23.06 | 2.140 | 0.0014* |
| Error | 36.51 | 4.543 |
*Corrected P, Greenhouse-Geisser ε = 0.4804.
Figure 2Effects of monoamines on female oviposition. Total number of eggs laid by C. chinensis females of strains (A) jC-S, (B) isC, (C) akC02, and (D) mC after injection with dopamine, octopamine, tyramine, serotonin, or Milli-Q water (control) over 5 days after injection. The number of eggs laid differed significantly among monoamine treatments on days 1 to 5 in jC-S, isC, and mC, and on days 1 and 5 (but not on days 2 to 4) in akC02 (Additional file 1: Table S2). Bars labeled with an asterisk differ significantly from the control within a strain (P < 0.05, Dunnett’s test). The numbers in parentheses show the sample size.
Summary of effects of monoamines on reduction of female mating receptivity and eggs laid compared with control of each strain of
| Receptivity | jC-S | ● | ● | ||
| isC | |||||
| akC02 | ● | ● | ● | ● | |
| mC | ● | ● | |||
| Egg laying | jC-S | ● 1-5 d | ● 4-5 d | ||
| isC | ● 1-5 d | ● 4 d | |||
| akC02 | ● 1 d | ||||
| mC | ● 1-5 d | ● 4-5 d |
“●” indicates an effect; number indicate days on which effects on egg laying were found.