
doi: 10.1242/jeb.01236
pmid: 15472023
SUMMARYSex pheromones are chemical signals used for mate attraction and discrimination in many invertebrate species. These compounds are often complex mixtures with different components having different effects. We tested live Drosophila melanogaster mutant female flies genetically depleted for unsaturated cuticular hydrocarbons, which were then perfumed with these substances to measure their influence on various aspects of reproduction. Female pheromones of the control Cs strain enhanced female attractivity,copulation duration and tended to decrease the number of female progeny of mutant females mated with Cs males, but no dose-dependent effect was found. Cs and variant males showed different response to Cs female pheromone, suggesting a strain-specific coadaptation of female and male characters. The fact that female pheromones induced reciprocal effects on the frequency of the genes contributed by females and males suggests that these substances regulate coevolutionary processes between the sexes.
Sex Attractants/*pharmacology/physiology, Male, Analysis of Variance, Fertility/drug effects, Sexual Behavior, Reproduction, Animal/*drug effects, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Drosophila melanogaster, Fertility, Species Specificity, Animals, Female, Sex Ratio, Sex Attractants, Drosophila melanogaster/*physiology, Reproduction/drug effects
Sex Attractants/*pharmacology/physiology, Male, Analysis of Variance, Fertility/drug effects, Sexual Behavior, Reproduction, Animal/*drug effects, Sexual Behavior, Animal, Drosophila melanogaster, Fertility, Species Specificity, Animals, Female, Sex Ratio, Sex Attractants, Drosophila melanogaster/*physiology, Reproduction/drug effects
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