Abstract

Despite >40 yr of ecological and behavioral research on reproductive interactions involved in sterile insect release programs, experimental measurement of the intensity of intermale competition for mates and the role of sterile females in these programs has rarely been addressed. Experiments described in this study were designed to evaluate these factors. Virgin females from a mass-rearing strain (mass reared for 36 yr) of the Mexican fruit fly, Anastrepha ludens (Loew), were released and subsequently recaptured along with native Mexican fruit flies in natural habitats in Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Tests were carried out at six locations and replicated four times. Recaptured females were dissected to determine mating status. Data were analysed to determine whether the released females mated with native males, and to evaluate the influence of test site, test date, and wild male and female density on rates of recapture of the released females and their mating status. Results showed that 5–50% of the recaptured females mated with native males. This indicates that released females (even from a strain adapted to mass rearing) may occupy a significant amount of native male reproductive effort and that males in native populations have excess reproductive capacity. Number of native males captured per test was significantly correlated with the percentage of mated females. Plots of percent mating versus number of native males captured showed that when number of captured males was high, percent females mated was always high, but when numbers of males captured was low, percent mating could still be high. A severe freeze during the fourth test greatly reduced the native population. Released females were recaptured up to 7 wk after release and 4 wk after the freeze, indicating that the mass-reared strain had sufficient physiological-behavioral tolerance to survive extreme environmental stress.

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