There are chemical signals that could be different among two species. That is one type of prezygotic isolating mechanism that could prevent fertilization.I dont know any technical stuff, but maybe the females body sees the new species sperm as an invader and its antibodies kill them off?
I would think pheromones are chemically different for different species in mantids, therefore mating might not work between mantis families. Just speculation, because I don't believe this has been elaborately analysed (the chemical formulas of these different pheromones). But I know that feline pheromones won't work for dogs and vice versa.There are chemical signals that could be different among two species. That is one type of prezygotic isolating mechanism that could prevent fertilization.
That's nothing Phil, i also know fish has even interbred with non-living object; there how we got swordfish :lol: :lol: Sorry i need a breakI know that fish and dogs have interbred; that's where we get dogfish.
I wasn't talking about pheremones. I was talking of chemical signals between gametes. I think vision has a lot to do with mantid mating though. I have seen S. carolina males on the backs of female Tenodera in the wild and have had males of different species mount and attempt mating with females of different species.I would think pheromones are chemically different for different species in mantids, therefore mating might not work between mantis families. Just speculation, because I don't believe this has been elaborately analysed (the chemical formulas of these different pheromones). But I know that feline pheromones won't work for dogs and vice versa.
And sperms from one species might not be able to interact with oocytes from a female of another species. This works only for species sufficiently close related. The ooths will be infertile or just like ooths from an unmated mantis. Mating might work between Hierodula Membranacea and Hierodula Grandis (just as an example), because they are from the same family. Any offspring of these might be interesting, but I would prevent such things. Like they are killing offspring of Grizzly and Polar bears that tends to happen more frequently due to climatic changes. A zoo (forgot which one) had to pay a penalty because they unwantedly produced offspring between lion and tiger (liger). This wouldn't happen in nature anyway because these 2 species would never meet in the wild.
I agree with all said above about these experiments to be unwanted, and should not be done.
Ok sorry, I misunderstood. Between gametes there are no pheromones, naturally. Chemical (hormone) signals might be relevant, but a limiting factor is also the life span of spermatozoons once they leave the male mantis body, which might be different between species. Of course mating in mantids is much about them seeing each other, and individuals from different species might take a try. Still I believe pheromones are important in deciding if it works or not. My knowledge of mantis mating is theory at the present, I am still raising my first mantid generation, and have not had any opportunity to mate any mantid before. But I will try as soon as my mantis are ready for it. The rest of my knowledge is what I know about biochemistry in mammals (as a vet), and what I read in the Prete book. And I like to discuss scientific things anyway.I wasn't talking about pheremones. I was talking of chemical signals between gametes. I think vision has a lot to do with mantid mating though. I have seen S. carolina males on the backs of female Tenodera in the wild and have had males of different species mount and attempt mating with females of different species.
They say that members of species can interbreed. I don't know much about ligers, but that woudl mean lions and tigers are technically the same species. Kinda like dogs, regardless of how different they look, they are all the same species.
I should retract my previous statement. To be considered a species the offspring must be viable. Internet says ligers have been known to have offspring. The two big cats are in the same genus. Obviously the two are very closely related.Ok sorry, I misunderstood. Between gametes there are no pheromones, naturally. Chemical (hormone) signals might be relevant, but a limiting factor is also the life span of spermatozoons once they leave the male mantis body, which might be different between species. Of course mating in mantids is much about them seeing each other, and individuals from different species might take a try. Still I believe pheromones are important in deciding if it works or not. My knowledge of mantis mating is theory at the present, I am still raising my first mantid generation, and have not had any opportunity to mate any mantid before. But I will try as soon as my mantis are ready for it. The rest of my knowledge is what I know about biochemistry in mammals (as a vet), and what I read in the Prete book. And I like to discuss scientific things anyway.
Regarding ligers (and off topic for this section of forum, sorry): Tigers and lions both are feline although of course diff. species(Panthera tigris, Panthera leo), they interbreed. A liger is bigger than a tiger, light brown with very blurry stripes if any. if F2 generations are possible, no idea. As I said, these breedings are mostly accidents in zoos, and actually not wanted.
dogs are all the same species, (Canis lupus familiaris)and interbreed without problems. They interbreed with their genetic ancestors, wolves and coyotes, but no other canines like foxes. wolf-dog interbreeding has been done for research in wolf behaviour, and these offspring are more wolf than dog. nothing to keep as a pet. I guess this discussion is too much off mantis-topic, so I stop here.
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