Abstract

By feeding male Drosophila subobscura with stained yeast before courtship it was shown that the males transfer regurgitated crop contents to females during courtship. The female takes the drop of food with her proboscis directly from the male's extended proboscis and the male then attempts to copulate. The food passes into the female crop or ventriculus and females that take the drop have higher fecundity on a low-nutrient medium than those females denied access to the drop. ‘Starved’ females take the drop of food from the male more frequently than well-fed females and a comparison of crop sizes revealed that flies collected from the wild resemble the starved laboratory groups. Similar courtship feeding behaviours are described for other members of the obscura species group. Within the willistoni species group, male D. nebulosa deposit an anal drop containing gut contents on the substrate in front of the female during courtship and females consume this drop. A review of the literature suggests that various forms of courtship feeding may be widespread within the genus but that the extent of feeding by males of different species may vary.

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