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Oviposition and pollination behavior of the Yucca moth, Tegeticula maculata (Lepidoptera: Prodoxidae), and its relation to the reproductive biology of Yucca whipplei (Agavaceae)

Publication Name Oecologia
Data Source Oecologia
Data Type Publication
Volume 49
Journal Number
Publication Year 1981
Publication Place
Publisher
Pagination pp. 96-101
ISBN/ISSN
D. Udovic

The adult behavior of the yucca moth, Tegeticula maculata Riley, is finely tuned to the reproductive biology of its specific host plant Yucca whipplei Torr. The female moths oviposit in the ovaries of the yucca flowers and actively pollinate the same flowers with pollen which they have collected previously. The selective pressures imposed on the moths by 1) the plant's need for pollen transfer via an insect pollinating agent, 2) its partial self-incompatibility, and 3) its ability to regulate seed set by aborting excess fruits, have molded the pollinator's behavior in such a way that its offspring have the greatest possible chance of surviving through the early larval stages. The evolutionary responses of the pollinator include the following: 1) the female moths consistently fly to a different plant after collecting pollen, thus insuring cross-fertilization of the flowers, 2) they always pollinate after depositing the first egg in a flower, but not necessarily after subsequent ovipositions, and 3) females emerging near the end of the flowering season frequently oviposit in developing seed pods, as opposed to open flowers which are more likely to be aborted by the plants.

Yucca moth
Tegeticula maculata
Yucca whipplei
oviposition
pollination behavior
selective pressure
evolution
California
Baja California
Riverside Coutny and San Diego County
California
Tegeticula maculata (yucca moth) Yucca whipplei