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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for lock-and-key mechanisms in the internal genitalia of the Apamea moths (Lepidoptera, Noctuidae)

Kauri Mikkola
- 01 Apr 1992 - 
- Vol. 17, Iss: 2, pp 145-153
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TLDR
Fifty of the fifty‐six species of the genus Apamea known from North America and three Palaearctic species were analysed for lock‐and‐key characters in their internal genitalia, mainly in the male vesica and the female bursa copulatrix, forming a postcopulatory but prezygotic isolation mechanism.
Abstract
. Fifty of the fifty-six species of the genus Apamea known from North America and three Palaearctic species were analysed for lock-and-key characters in their internal genitalia, mainly in the male vesica and the female bursa copulatrix. There were an average of 4.5 such characters per species, structurally corresponding in the two sexes. Anatomically they form a postcopulatory but prezygotic isolation mechanism. In some closely related species, the internal genitalia are very similar, but these species have a precopulatory isolation mechanism in the presence or absence of male abdominal coremata. Closely related species did not have more lock-and-key characters than unrelated species, which is taken to indicate absence of character displacement. The anatomical distribution of the lock-and-key characters was examined and the organs of eight species are illustrated. The lock-and-key hypothesis has been abandoned by several earlier authors but mainly on consideration of external genitalia. In Apamea the invariable functional correspondence between sexes in the sperm transferring organs, and the overall species-specifity of characters but non-existence of interspecific differences under a precopulatory mechanism indicate that (a) lock-and-keys are functioning and (b) they act as isolation mechanisms. Alternative hypotheses of genitalic evolution are reviewed.

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Citations
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Rapid divergent evolution of sexual morphology: comparative tests of antagonistic coevolution and traditional female choice.

TL;DR: The possibility of a greater role for antagonistic coevolution in reproductive physiology than in morphology and the possibility that female choice and sexually antagonisticCoevolution have both been important in some lineages are discussed.
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The evolution of asymmetric genitalia in spiders and insects

TL;DR: This review is an attempt to focus attention on this promising but neglected topic by summarizing what the authors know about insect genital asymmetries, and by contrasting this with the situation in spiders, a group in which genitalymmetries are rare.
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Mechanisms and Evidence of Genital Coevolution: The Roles of Natural Selection, Mate Choice, and Sexual Conflict

TL;DR: The diverse mechanisms of genital coevolution that include natural selection, female mate choice, male-male competition, and how their interactions generate sexual conflict that can lead to sexually antagonistic coev evolution are reviewed.
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Subjective visual evaluation vs. traditional and geometric morphometrics in species delimitation: a comparison of moth genitalia

TL;DR: It is concluded that geometric morphometrics provides a powerful way to search for differences between taxa and serves as an objective, useful and novel way to visualize morphological variation in shape in insect taxonomy.
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Widespread decoupling of mtDNA variation and species integrity in Grammia tiger moths (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)

TL;DR: The molecular evolution of Grammia challenges the view that interspecific gene exchange occurs rarely and is restricted to recently diverged species, and shows the value of mtDNA in detecting cryptic hybridization, while highlighting the inherent dangers of drawing taxonomic conclusions based solely on mtDNA.
References
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Journal Article

Animal species and evolution

G. A. Horridge
- 01 Jan 1964 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cost of Mating

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The lock-and-key hypothesis: evolutionary and biosystematic interpretation of insect genitalia

TL;DR: The authors cannot withhold a hearty assent to the conclusion of one of the most eminent of modem physiologists, who says that the hard parts of the male correspond so exactly with those of the female, that the organs of one species cannot fit those of another.
Journal ArticleDOI

Scents and Eversible Scent Structures of Male Moths

TL;DR: Article de synthese sur les structures erectiles d'olfaction chez les mâles : localisation, pheromone concernee, comportement associe, ceci par famille.
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Morphology of the Reproductive Systems and Mating in Two Representative Members of the Family Noctuidae, Pseudaletia Unipuncta and Peridroma Margaritosa, with Comparison to Heliothis Zea

TL;DR: The gross morphology of the reproductive system is described and illustrated for the male and female of Pseudaletia unipuncta and Peridroma margaritosa and comparisons are made with Heliothis zea.