Female katydids prefer
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Female katydids prefer mates cool in winter, hot in summer

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Female katydids prefer mates cool in winter, hot in summer

Female katydids prefer cool mates in winters and in the summer they like them hot, says a new research which found that male bush crickets produce calls to attract females for mating that change with the seasons.

Washington, Mar 12 : Female katydids prefer 'cool' mates in winters and in the summer they 'like them hot', says a new research which found that male bush crickets produce calls to attract females for mating that change with the seasons.

According to scientists at the University of Missouri, one species of katydid may owe its ecological success and expanded habitat range to the ability of male katydids to adjust their mating calls to attract females.

Summer calls of males of the katydid species Neoconocephalus triops, which can be found from Peru to Missouri, are much faster than their winter calls.

Johannes Schul, MU associate professor of biological sciences, found that females were attracted only by a specific speed of the calls and this preference changed with temperature.

"Warm females preferred much faster calls than cold females. The fast summer calls attracted females only at high temperatures and the slow winter calls only at lower temperatures. Thus, during the winter, females prefer 'cool guys,' and in the summer they 'like them hot'," Schul said.

According to Schul, male calls exhibit substantial flexibility. At equal temperatures, summer males, or those that mature during the summer, produce calls with a higher pulse rate than winter males, or those that mature in late winter/early spring.

The research team tested the katydids' preferences by placing females on a spherical "treadmill" and tracking the speed and accuracy of their responses to recordings of male calls.

"The really amazing thing about the katydids is that these specific calls are what keeps them from mating with the wrong species. It's amazing how these calls can be flexible, but still work to maintain their specificity," Schul said.

In the study, females had strong preferences for pulse rates within a narrow range. The attractive ranges did not differ between summer and winter females.

Both male pulse rate of calls and female preference for pulse rate changed with ambient temperature. Female preference changed more than male calls.

The summer call was only attractive at 25 degrees Celsius, whereas the slower winter call was only attractive at 20 degrees Celsius.

ANI

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