Chivalry is not dead - if you’re a cricket

INSECT: In this photo released by the Bureau of Land Management via The Spectrum, a new genus of cricket discovered on the Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument is shown in this undated photo in Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument, Ariz. (AP Photo/Bureau of Land Management via The Spectrum)

INSECT: In this photo released by the Bureau of Land Management via The Spectrum, a new genus of cricket discovered on the Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument is shown in this undated photo in Grand Canyon-Parashant National Monument, Ariz. (AP Photo/Bureau of Land Management via The Spectrum)

Published Oct 7, 2011

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London - Contrary to popular beliefs that chivalry is a virtue held only by humans - and a dying one at that - scientists said on Thursday that insects too can put the interests of others before their own.

Researchers from Exeter University showed how some male field crickets will overtly put their mating partner's lives ahead of their own, by guarding them as they seek cover from predators. And in return, they're likely to get more sex.

“Even males of small insects, which we would not define as intelligent or affective, can be 'chivalrous' or protective with their partners,” said Rolando Rodriguez-Munoz, a conservation biologist at Exeter who led the study.

While most previous knowledge of cricket mating behaviour has been acquired through lab research, this study, published in the journal Current Biology, looked at wild populations using infrared cameras.

This gave a better view of their natural, and private, lives.

The crickets were marked using a genetic tagging system known as genotyping, allowing them to be tracked and recorded.

The study found that alone, males and females have equal risks of being eaten by predators. But when they are in pairs, the male has a much higher chance of being eaten than the female. This is because the male gives the female priority access when returning to safety, the researchers said.

The team stressed, however, that this sort of dangerous behaviour should not be misinterpreted as pure altruism, since the seemingly unselfish males are undoubtedly getting dividends.

In return for his protection, the male gets more chances to mate with the female and more subsequent offspring.

“Perhaps it shines a light on the fact that apparently chivalrous acts may have ulterior motives,” Rodriguez-Munoz said in a statement about the work.

This study was conducted over three consecutive mating seasons, but the researchers now was to see whether chivalrous tendencies are passed from father to son.

“We are looking forward to seeing whether chivalry prevails in future generations,” Rodriguez-Munoz said. “There may be some years when both sexes behave in a more obviously selfish fashion and attempt to escape down the burrow first.” - Reuters

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