TY - JOUR
T1 - Female penis, male vagina, and their correlated evolution in a cave insect
AU - Yoshizawa, Kazunori
AU - Ferreira, Rodrigo L.
AU - Kamimura, Yoshitaka
AU - Lienhard, Charles
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank F. Pellegatti-Franco for specimens, M. Souza Silva and M. Medeiros for support in the field, E. Magalhães for information concerning the cave locations, M. Villela, M. Michele Perdigão, and L. Faria Ferreira for help with some mating observations, and J. Hollier for discussion and final language editing. This study was supported in part by CNPq grant 301061/2011-4 to R.L.F., JSPS grant 22770058 to Y.K., and JSPS grant 24570093 to K.Y.
PY - 2014/5/5
Y1 - 2014/5/5
N2 - Sex-specific elaborations are common in animals and have attracted the attention of many biologists, including Darwin [1]. It is accepted that sexual selection promotes the evolution of sex-specific elaborations. Due to the faster replenishment rate of gametes, males generally have higher potential reproductive and optimal mating rates than females. Therefore, sexual selection acts strongly on males [2], leading to the rapid evolution and diversification of male genitalia [3]. Male genitalia are sometimes used as devices for coercive holding of females as a result of sexual conflict over mating [4, 5]. In contrast, female genitalia are usually simple. Here we report the reversal of intromittent organs in the insect genus Neotrogla (Psocodea: Prionoglarididae) from Brazilian caves. Females have a highly elaborate, penis-like structure, the gynosome, while males lack an intromittent organ. The gynosome has species-specific elaborations, such as numerous spines that fit species-specific pouches in the simple male genital chamber. During prolonged copulation (∼40-70 hr), a large and potentially nutritious ejaculate is transferred from the male via the gynosome. The correlated genital evolution in Neotrogla is probably driven by reversed sexual selection with females competing for seminal gifts. Nothing similar is known among sex-role reversed animals.
AB - Sex-specific elaborations are common in animals and have attracted the attention of many biologists, including Darwin [1]. It is accepted that sexual selection promotes the evolution of sex-specific elaborations. Due to the faster replenishment rate of gametes, males generally have higher potential reproductive and optimal mating rates than females. Therefore, sexual selection acts strongly on males [2], leading to the rapid evolution and diversification of male genitalia [3]. Male genitalia are sometimes used as devices for coercive holding of females as a result of sexual conflict over mating [4, 5]. In contrast, female genitalia are usually simple. Here we report the reversal of intromittent organs in the insect genus Neotrogla (Psocodea: Prionoglarididae) from Brazilian caves. Females have a highly elaborate, penis-like structure, the gynosome, while males lack an intromittent organ. The gynosome has species-specific elaborations, such as numerous spines that fit species-specific pouches in the simple male genital chamber. During prolonged copulation (∼40-70 hr), a large and potentially nutritious ejaculate is transferred from the male via the gynosome. The correlated genital evolution in Neotrogla is probably driven by reversed sexual selection with females competing for seminal gifts. Nothing similar is known among sex-role reversed animals.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.cub.2014.03.022
DO - 10.1016/j.cub.2014.03.022
M3 - Article
C2 - 24746797
AN - SCOPUS:84899919736
SN - 0960-9822
VL - 24
SP - 1006
EP - 1010
JO - Current Biology
JF - Current Biology
IS - 9
ER -