Bi courtship among hissing roaches could be a sign of a superdad. The traits could be a behavioral syndrome.

COCKROACH LOVEAmong hissing cockroaches males, intense courtship of females often goes along with flirty little whistles for another male. Logue
SNOWBIRD,
UTAH — A flirty
little hiss for a guy could mean a male hissing cockroach is going to be quite
popular with the ladies too.
And
he’s likely to have lots of kids.
In a lab test, some 20 percent of male giant hissing roaches
went romantic when they met another male, says David Logue of the University of Lethbridge
in Canada.
Males can’t actually mate, but flirtatious Gromphadorhina
portentosa males, some outweighing a mouse, hissed gently and made the
thrusting gestures of courtship among male roachkind.
Same-sex courters had no objection to females and, given a
chance, courted them with unusual ardor. These linked tendencies, flirting with
males and wowing females, define a behavioral syndrome, Logue said at the
Animal Behavior Society meeting held in Snowbird, Utah, this week. That link, he speculated, may
end up explaining the evolutionary puzzle of male flirtation among roaches.
Exploring links between behaviors, or behavioral syndromes,
can reveal complexities of evolution. One part of a syndrome could supercharge
a species’ fitness, but another part might have a different effect. It might
drive the animal to expend energy in futile pursuits or even do something just
plain dumb.
Logue and his colleagues are analyzing cockroaches to see if
they have any behavioral syndromes. The link between the male flirtation and
the intense courtship of females is what Logue calls the libido syndrome.
To test the results of the super-flirt syndrome, Logue let
roaches mate heterosexually if they chose. Then he monitored the mated females
for the three months or so of hissing roach pregnancy.
Instead of just laying eggs after fertilization, the hissing
roaches extrude their egg case only temporarily. “It looks like a string of
yellow pearls,” Logue says. Females reposition the egg string and retract it into
a pouch. Months later, mom gives birth to dozens of little ones, baby- white roaches
that turn brown in a few hours.
Broods of baby roaches tended to be larger if the dad had
shown a taste for courting other males, Logue said.
Maybe this abundance of young could end up explaining how
male courtship persists, Logue says. So far, he says, he doesn’t see a benefit
for it in its own right, but perhaps evolutionary forces have favored the
male-female part of the syndrome and the male-male flirtation survives as
spillover.
Let’s not declare anything a dubious spillover too fast,
cautions behavioral ecologist Jeff Lucas of Purdue
University in West Lafayette, Ind.
Behaviors puzzling to human eyes can turn out to have important silver linings.
Female couplings among certain weevils have turned out to enhance reproduction,
as the activity attracts the interest of high-quality males.
Logue agrees that he needs to check for possible benefits to
male courtship before claiming it’s a nonadaptive spillover of the libido
syndrome.
Even if the syndrome isn’t an odd spillover, if both parts
of the syndrome have their own benefits, Lucas says, “that could be just as
interesting.”
Found in: Biology and Life
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