• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

First Female Same-Sex Behavior Seen In Crickets, But Only Because We’ve Not Been Looking

July 24, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Male Hawaiian field crickets typically sing to attract a mate. However, some of these males have evolved a genetic mutation, which means they fall silent, unable to chirp, known as flatwing. While this might seem sad, this genetic mutation actually protects them from a parasitoid fly, their deadly enemy that can find a cricket by its chirps. While this is well studied in males, researchers wanted to look at how the lack of song and genetics might impact female crickets’ social behavior, with some surprising results.

Hawaiian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus) are well studied, especially when it comes to male-male and male-female social interactions. However, much less attention has been paid to female-female social interactions in insects – and in the wider world of animal research. The team designed an experiment to see how female-female interactions vary, both in the presence of male song and silence, and also with different genotypes of the females. 

The team tested female pairs that either had the same genotype or were mismatched under either male song conditions or silence. Each experimental trial lasted 10 minutes after the second cricket was added. Either the male song was played in the background to mimic the social context in which female crickets would typically interact with each other, or the trials were carried out with no song playing. A total of 167 trials were carried out, and each trial was filmed so that the behavior could be analyzed. 

The team looked at which behaviors were expressed, how many times they were expressed, and in the case of antenna contact between females, how long this specific behavior lasted. They found that antenna contact was the most common behavior and frequently was just investigative between the two females, not leading to any aggression. This behavior was also more likely to happen in the trials where the background song of male chirps was played. The presence of male song also affected the antenna contact duration, as this was longer when the male song was played compared to the trials in silence. 



Biting was also found to occur more often in the presence of male song, and often occurred during or after antenna contact. Typically, males bite each other on the heads, while females were seen to bite on the legs or abdomens of other individuals. Only 27 out of 334 crickets attempted to fly away during the interactions, and this occurred more in the silent trials. 

The team reported that a very small proportion of the trials led to female-female sexual behavior in the crickets, with two observations of mounting and one observation of mounting acceptance across all of the trials. This represents the first known instance of same-sex female sexual behavior in crickets. 

“In summary, females explore each other frequently, and the expression of this behaviour is dependent on their own genetic identity, that of their interacting partner, and acoustic signals present in the social environment,” explain the authors in the paper. “The results of this study urge that future research pays due attention to any sex that may be understudied in a given system.”

The paper is published in Proceedings Of The Royal Society B.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Biden nominee for key China export post expects Huawei to remain blacklisted
  2. Soccer-Real, Barca influence on Spain fades along with club superpower status
  3. Apollo 13: What Actually Happened On NASA’s Near-Disaster Moon Mission
  4. How Many Ants Are There In The World?

Source Link: First Female Same-Sex Behavior Seen In Crickets, But Only Because We've Not Been Looking

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • Meet The Aardwolf: The Smallest Hyena, With A 300,000-Termite-A-Night Appetite
  • “Missing Link” Planet Detected? It Could Turn Into Two Different Types Of Worlds
  • Your Dog Is Not A Good Judge Of Character
  • NASA’s Viking Project May Have Found Life On Mars 50 Years Ago, Then Accidentally Killed It
  • First Evidence Of A Dinosaur Herd Combining Two Species Revealed In Cretaceous Tracks
  • Thanks To Wolves’ Return, Aspen Trees Thrive In Yellowstone For First Time In 80 Years
  • Strike-Slip Fault Earthquake Caught On CCTV For First Time Ever In Myanmar
  • “It Has To Be Something”: The Baltic Sea Anomaly And The Mystery “Object” 90 Meters Underwater
  • What Would Happen If You Tried To Stand On Uranus?
  • Here’s The Actual Number Of Steps You Should Walk Per Day (It’s Not 10,000)
  • “Groundbreaking” Obesity Treatment That Turns Up The Heat On Fat Cells Passes Phase I Clinical Trials
  • Australia’s Largest And Longest-Lasting Toxic Algal Bloom Has Killed 14,000 Animals So Far
  • Why Is Your Sleep Schedule So Messed Up? Math Has The Answer!
  • The Petrozavodsk Phenomenon: A Celestial Mystery Seen Over 1977 Soviet Russia
  • A Growing Number Of People Believe Aliens Have Visited Us – And That Could Be A Problem
  • The World’s Tiniest Snake Was Lost To Science For 20 Years. Now, It’s Back, And We Have Photos
  • Terror Bird’s Mangled Leg Suggests It Died In The Jaws Of A Caiman 15 Million Years Ago
  • How Do Americans Really Feel About Diversity And Multiculturalism?
  • First Female Same-Sex Behavior Seen In Crickets, But Only Because We’ve Not Been Looking
  • How Do Rockets Move In Space If There Is No Medium To Push Against?
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version