The Curious Do's and Don'ts of Insect Dating Behavior
Bugs tap, dance and buzz to attract their mates—and some get eaten
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian.com, February 12, 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
4) Wings of Love
Colonies of red imported fire ants produce “winged reproductives,” flying ants that don’t forage or care for larvae and pupae but exist only to breed. “They’re kind of a lot like teenagers,” writes Bart Drees, a professor of entomology at Texas A&M University. “They just hang around the colony for weeks or months, consume a lot of food and wait until it’s ‘party time:’ the first sunny day after a rainy period. When they leave the nest, they fly high up into the air and mate.” But reality soon sets in: the male dies not long after the midair tryst.
3) Atmosphere Is Everything
Dung beetles get frisky exactly where you’d expect them to – in heaps of manure. Sometimes pairs also work together to roll a “brood ball” of dung and soil that serves as a nursery for their young.
2) Termighty Love
King and queen termites are the only ones in a colony that reproduce, but, as Rebeccah Waterworth, an entomology graduate student at the University of California Riverside, says, “the pair is monogamous and mates for life.” Some queens can live for a decade, so they even have a shot at a tenth anniversary. Tradition calls for tin or aluminum gifts, but perhaps they’d prefer wood?
1) Love Bites
Female spiders, which tend to be bigger than males, are notorious for snacking on their partners, which is why male black widows sometimes wrap up their mates up in silk beforehand. (Occasionally, Lemann says, a strapping female will “bust out of the silk and grab her mate and eat him” anyway.) But in the Australian black widow’s mating ritual, “post-copulatory suicide” is routine. The male “does a sort of somersault into her fangs,” Lemann says; his body nourishes her as she makes their eggs. Sweet.
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Comments (9)
i love this post and learning!! haha :D
Posted by don't wanna say on April 25,2012 | 01:17 PM
very true.
Posted by don't want to say on April 25,2012 | 01:16 PM
how were the lovebuggs made . people keep saying that university of florida made them ,, mutants they are say scientists. how can humans make buggs . i thought god was the only one that could make a species. im wierded out. please someone answer my question. sincerly, debbie shlutz
Posted by debbie on May 17,2010 | 04:15 PM
I have a question. I have these bugs that are crawling all over the back of my house and deck. They were also crawling over a pile of pine branches that came down as a result of a storm. I have never seen this type of bug before, they look like mutant Love Bugs. They are black, some have what looks like a red sack, and crawl around joined to each other like Love Bugs, but they are smaller than the regular love bugs which is why I said they look like mutant love bugs. Any idea as to what they are and how I can get rid of them?
Posted by Carolyn on April 29,2009 | 04:06 PM
I would of liked to know more, about the Florida Love Bug I was more interesting in seeing! I was amazed there was no info that I read here it about! DID I MISS IT?
Posted by Darlene on February 25,2009 | 07:07 PM
Speaking of the (exotic) Love Bug in Florida, some people once thought they gathered around cars because of the heat generated from the engines. Turns out I believe that their pheromones are chemically similar to that of carbon monoxide. Talk about sniffing tailpipes!
Posted by Dennis Profant on February 21,2009 | 05:22 PM
Regarding seven (7) above...not sure why you'd mention it being a mile downwind?? Shouldn't matter how far (close or near) as the key thing is being able to detect the single molecule. Also wonder why something that appears to be so reactive (the one molecule) isn't 'cancelled' by other atoms that it comes into contact with in the air (such as oxygen).
Posted by Ken Erickson on February 20,2009 | 12:21 PM
Why not the mantis? Arn't they notorious for eating during the act of repdroduction?
Posted by Elliott on February 19,2009 | 01:47 PM
You skipped the Love Bug of Florida. Although, there are definitely some good ones up there. Maybe make a top 20!
Posted by on February 17,2009 | 01:14 PM
Hi this is so COOL!
Posted by michelle on February 13,2009 | 09:07 PM