Scoundrels – #2

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You’d think that transvestism might be a uniquely human trait, but the animal kingdom is not without other species where males routinely imitate females, well, without the hairy arms and the ill-fitting stilettos.

Interestingly, there are even transvestite insects and the males of one of these species, a rove beetle from Central America, subtly imitate females as a means of getting access to and reproducing with bone-fide females. The transvestite rove beetle (Leistotrophus versicolor) is a denizen of the rain-forests of Costa Rica, where, like lots of other rove beetles, it makes a living by seeking out decaying plant and animal matter to feed on the adult insects and larvae that make use of these ephemeral resources. These honey-pots don’t last long in the super-charged biological activity of the hot and humid tropical forests, so when normal male rove beetles find them they guard them because they also attract females, allowing a male to assemble a harem.

Leisotrophus versicolor
The transvestite rove beetle (Prof. J Alcock)

Males of this rove beetle are divided into two types, normal butch specimens and small, effeminate ones. The small, effeminate males can find honey-pots, but they have little hope of defending them against the bigger males, so their chances of building a harem are next to nothing. These males have evolved another means of making sure they pass their genes onto the next generation. They sneak past the normal males using their effeminate appearance as a disguise and under the harem owner’s nose they have it away with the females he has been so carefully guarding. This strategy is almost flawless, but now and again the transvestite male is caught prancing around in the harem by the owner male and the only way he can avoid being torn limb from limb is by assuring the aggressor of his femininity and giving in to a ‘mating’.  One sore behind later, the transvestite male carries on sneakily copulating with the females in the harem, only slightly more nervous for his unpleasant experience.

Leisotrophus versicolor
A female mimicking male L. versicolor (front) gets checked out by a butch male of the same species (rear) (Prof J. Alcock).

The duplicity of these beetles is not just limited to transvestism, as they can also produce odours that mimic the smell the rotting matter in order to attract prey, namely flies. The rotting matter these beetles depend on can often be hard to come by, so they need an alternative means of finding suitable prey. Within the tip of their abdomen these beetles have a pair of pygidial glands that can be popped out to smear an odorous secretion on a suitable platform, such as a leaf. Flies are drawn to this odour in the hope of finding some filth to feed on to lay their eggs on, so all the beetle has to do is to wait until a suitable victim scuttles within pouncing distance.

Leisotrophus versicolor
A tranvestite rove beetle has smeared some of the malodorous secretion from its pygidial glands on a leaf and now it waits for a fly to be drawn to the trap (Prof. J. Alcock).

The ability of this rove beetle to use mimicry in reproduction and feeding makes it one of the most impressive con-merchants in the animal kingdom and for this reason it is at number two in the scoundrel chart.

There’s more about this beetle in the book, Extraordinary Animals

Further reading

Alcock, J. and Forsyth, A. Post-copulatory aggression toward their mates by males of the rove beetle Leistotrophus versicolor (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 22, (1988) 303-308.

Forsyth, A. and Alcock, J. Female mimicry and resource defense polygyny by males of a tropical rove beetle, Leistotrophus versicolor (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae). Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 26, (1990) 325-330.

 

Forsyth, A. and Alcock, J. Prey luring as alternative foraging tactics of the fly catching rove beetle Leistotrophus versicolor (Coleoptera: Staphylinidae). Journal of Insect Behavior 3, (1990) 703-718.

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