WASHINGTON – The way male and female butterflies relate to one another as adults may depend on how they grew up — sort of like people.
Except for butterflies, it's not whether they had a happy youth. It's the weather.
When certain caterpillars are raised in warm, moist conditions they grow into what some would consider traditional roles — males pursuing demure females.
But new research has found that when they are raised in dry, cool conditions, it's the ladies that become aggressive adults, actively courting the guys.
Researchers led by Kathleen L. Prudic of Yale University report their findings in Friday's edition of the journal Science.
They studied Bicyclus anynana, known as the squinting bush brown butterfly because of the eye-like patterns on their wings.
While not visible to humans, pattern reflections make the ones doing the courting appear brighter in the eyes of those being courted, Prudic explained in a telephone interview.
"It makes them more noticeable," she said, "kind of like a nice car."
Insects have a short amount of time to mate and lay eggs, she said, so they "hit the ground running."
When these butterflies mate, males deliver nutrients to the females in addition to sperm.
----
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20110106/ap_on_sc/us_sci_butterfly_sex;_ylt=AiO1DJd_FW9ZgVjCWkcyHfKs0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTFlaWY1bXBpBHBvcwMxMTYEc2VjA2FjY29yZGlvbl9zY2llbmNlBHNsawNidXR0ZXJmbHlzZXg-