Abstract

Oithona davisae Ferrari and Orsi were collected from the innermost region of Tokyo Bay, Japan, in 1980 and 1981. The mating behavior of this marine cyclopoid copepod consists of several steps, starting with the paddling of the male in random search of a mate. This behavior is followed by a spiraling movement in pursuance of a mate. Next is the copulatory grasp during which the male grasps the fourth swimming legs of the female partner by means of his first antennae. Whilst in this position, the male's urosome vibrates to allow the spermatophores to extrude from his genital openings. The mating behavior then culminates in the spermatophore transfer. Males do not grasp the uro-some or caudal setae of the mating partner before proper copulatory grasp. The specialized setae of the female's fourth legs may help the male to grasp her legs firmly. Spiraling occurs when the male approaches or traverses the trail of a female that is ready to copulate and that presumably emits a sex-attractant pheromone. The turning radius reduces gradually from more than 1 mm to ca. 0.25 mm as the male approaches the mate female. Females may register spiraling as a mate (male)-approaching signal. Spiraling may lead the male to locate a pheromone source more accurately, and to promote diffusion of the pheromone to prevent other males from pursuing the source. This swimming strategy can increase the copulatory chance of mature virgin females.

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