학술논문

Reproductive biology of Hawaiian lava crickets
Document Type
article
Source
Current Research in Insect Science, Vol 5, Iss , Pp 100074- (2024)
Subject
Life-history evolution
Lava crickets
Extreme environments
Resource allocation
Caconemobius
Nemobiinae
Zoology
QL1-991
Language
English
ISSN
2666-5158
Abstract
Insects have spread across diverse ecological niches, including extreme environments requiring specialized traits for survival. However, little is understood about the reproductive traits required to facilitate persistence in such environments. Here, we report on the reproductive biology of two species of endemic Hawaiian lava crickets (Caconemobius fori and Caconemobius anahulu) that inhabit barren lava flows on the Big Island. We examine traits that reflect investment into reproduction for both male and female lava crickets and compare them to the non-extremophile Allard's ground cricket (Allonemobius allardi) in the same sub-family. Lava cricket females possessed fewer, but much larger eggs than ground crickets, while males do not provide the costly nuptial gifts that are characteristic of the Nemobiinae subfamily. Lava crickets also have longer ovipositors relative to their body length than related Caconemobius species that occupy cave habitats on the Hawaiian islands. The differences in reproduction we report reveal how these little-known cricket species may increase survival of their offspring in the resource-deprived conditions of their hot, dry environments.