Aerial contest competition has proven to be a challenging phenomenon to interpret in many territorial insects. Because the duels often consist of elaborate and/or high speed ascending maneuvers, the hypothesis that they are settled due to asymmetries in flight performance is intuitively appealing. We evaluated this hypothesis by contrasting differences in known morphological determinants of flight performance between (1) residents vs. non-residents of the territorial wasp, Hemipepsis ustulata and between (2) H. ustulata vs. a non-territorial relative, Pepsis thisbe. In the first contrast, resident male H. ustulata were seen to be larger, and had a tendency for reduced wing loading, but they did not possess greater flight musculature or wing...
International audienceInsect flight is made possible by different morphological structures: wings pr...
1. The relationship between maximal acceleration capacity and flight morphology was tested experimen...
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)In many animals, males interact with or...
Aerial contest competition has proven to be a challenging phenomenon to interpret in many territoria...
This paper analyzes the territorial behaviour of males of the tarantula-hawk wasp Hemipepsis ustulat...
Sexual competition promotes sexual selection and may influence the evolution of morphology, physiolo...
Although contemporary animal contest theory emphasises the importance of physical asymmetries in res...
A small-male mating advantage has been only rarely encountered in territorial species and may be an ...
In the parasitoid Venturia canescens Gravenhorst (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), asexual and sexual wa...
Body size influences wing shape and associated muscles in flying animals which is a conspicuous phen...
Male mating success is often determined by territory ownership and traits associated with successful...
While investigating the mating strategy of wasps in the genus Philanthus we have discovered that the...
In prey-predator systems where the interacting individuals are both fliers, the flight performance o...
Wings are a key trait underlying the evolutionary success of birds, bats, and insects. For over a ce...
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)Among insect species that compet...
International audienceInsect flight is made possible by different morphological structures: wings pr...
1. The relationship between maximal acceleration capacity and flight morphology was tested experimen...
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)In many animals, males interact with or...
Aerial contest competition has proven to be a challenging phenomenon to interpret in many territoria...
This paper analyzes the territorial behaviour of males of the tarantula-hawk wasp Hemipepsis ustulat...
Sexual competition promotes sexual selection and may influence the evolution of morphology, physiolo...
Although contemporary animal contest theory emphasises the importance of physical asymmetries in res...
A small-male mating advantage has been only rarely encountered in territorial species and may be an ...
In the parasitoid Venturia canescens Gravenhorst (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae), asexual and sexual wa...
Body size influences wing shape and associated muscles in flying animals which is a conspicuous phen...
Male mating success is often determined by territory ownership and traits associated with successful...
While investigating the mating strategy of wasps in the genus Philanthus we have discovered that the...
In prey-predator systems where the interacting individuals are both fliers, the flight performance o...
Wings are a key trait underlying the evolutionary success of birds, bats, and insects. For over a ce...
Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)Among insect species that compet...
International audienceInsect flight is made possible by different morphological structures: wings pr...
1. The relationship between maximal acceleration capacity and flight morphology was tested experimen...
Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)In many animals, males interact with or...