Two matings lead to more copulatory wounding than a single mating in female Drosophila melanogaster
Bengisu S. Subasi, Anika L. Finsterbusch, Martha Büge, Sophie A. O. Armitage

TL;DR
Female fruit flies that mate multiple times suffer more genital and abdominal wounds than those that mate once.
Contribution
The study shows that polyandry increases female genital and abdominal wounding in Drosophila melanogaster.
Findings
Females mating twice had more genital wounds and a larger total area of wounding than those mating once.
Females that refused a second mating still had similar wounding to those that mated twice.
Wounds on the ventral abdomen increased with mating frequency.
Abstract
Copulation can result in males inflicting wounds to the female genitalia, so-called traumatic mating. Such wounds are potentially costly as they could be entry points for infections, and they have been associated with a shorter lifespan in insect species. In many species of insects, females mate with more than one male, which leads to the question of whether the number of matings affects the amount of genital damage that females suffer from those matings. Here, we test whether copulation frequency affects the number or size of genital wounds in Drosophila melanogaster. Females that mated twice had more genital wounds and a larger total area of wounding, compared with females that mated once. However, females that refused to mate a second time had a similar area of wounding to females that mated twice. We found that wounds to the ventral abdomen also increased with increased mating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Behavior and Reproduction · Plant and animal studies · Insect and Arachnid Ecology and Behavior
