Data from: Drosophila pachea asymmetric lobes are part of a grasping device and stabilize one-sided mating
Background: Multiple animal species exhibit morphological asymmetries in male genitalia. In insects, left-right genital asymmetries evolved many times independently and have been proposed to appear in response to changes in mating position. However, little is known about the relationship between mat...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Multiple animal species exhibit morphological asymmetries in
male genitalia. In insects, left-right genital asymmetries evolved many
times independently and have been proposed to appear in response to
changes in mating position. However, little is known about the
relationship between mating position and the interaction of male and
female genitalia during mating, and functional analyses of asymmetric
morphologies in genitalia are virtually non-existent. We investigated the
relationship between mating position, asymmetric genital morphology and
genital coupling in the fruit fly Drosophila pachea, in which males
possess an asymmetric pair of external genital lobes and mate in an
unusual right-sided position on top of the female. Results: We examined D.
pachea copulation by video recording and by scanning electron microscopy
of genital complexes. We observed that the interlocking of male and female
genital organs in D. pachea is remarkably different from genital coupling
in the well-studied D. melanogaster. In D. pachea, the female oviscapt
valves are asymmetrically twisted during copulation. The male’s asymmetric
lobes tightly grasp the female’s abdomen in an asymmetric ‘locking’
position, with the left and right lobes contacting different female
structures. The male anal plates, which grasp the female genitalia in D.
melanogaster, do not contact the female in D. pachea. Experimental lobe
amputation by micro-surgery and laser-ablation of lobe bristles led to
aberrant coupling of genitalia and variable mating positions, in which the
male was tilted towards the right side of the female. Conclusion: We
describe, for the first time, how the mating position depends on coupling
of male and female genitalia in a species with asymmetric genitalia and
one-sided mating position. Our results show that D. pachea asymmetric
epandrial lobes do not act as a compensatory mechanism for the change from
symmetric to one-sided mating position that occurred during evolution of
D. pachea’s ancestors, but as holding devices with distinct specialized
functions on the left and right sides. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.1r1j4 |