2017-03-27T17:06:44Z
2017-03-27T17:06:44Z
2016-04-05
2017-03-27T17:06:44Z
Butterflies and moths are subject to different evolutionary pressures that affect several aspects of their behaviour and physiology, particularly sexual communication. Butterflies are day-flying insects (excluding hedylids) whose partner-finding strategy is mainly based on visual cues and female butterflies having apparently lost the typical sex pheromone glands. Moths, in contrast, are mostly night-flyers and use female-released long-range pheromones for partner-finding. However, some moth families are exclusively day-flyers, and therefore subject to evolutionary pressures similar to those endured by butterflies. Among them, the Castniidae, also called 'butterfly-moths' or 'sun-moths', behave like butterflies and, thus, castniid females appear to have also lost their pheromone glands, an unparallel attribute in the world of moths. In this paper, we review the sexual communication strategy in day-flying Lepidoptera, mainly butterflies (superfamily Papilionoidea), Zygaenidae and Castniidae moths, and compare their mating behaviour with that of moth families of nocturnal habits, paying particular attention to the recently discovered butterfly-like partner-finding strategy of castniids and the fascinating facts and debates that led to its discovery.
Artículo
Versión aceptada
Inglés
Papallones; Lepidòpters; Conducta sexual dels animals; Comunicació animal; Butterflies; Lepidoptera; Sexual behavior in animals; Animal communication
Cambridge University Press
Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485316000158
Bulletin of Entomological Research, 2016, vol. 106, p. 421-431
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007485316000158
(c) Cambridge University Press, 2016