a, In the pre-mating epoch (after female entry and
before the first mount), males engaged in feeding, digging, or trying to
escape during ~25% of the “available” time (defined as
the time not spent in sniffing the female, mounting the female, or
lower-body grooming). In trials where males gained intromission at least
once, they became hyper-engaged in mating. In the subsequent mating epoch
(i.e. in the time between the first mount and the transfer of reproductive
fluids), males spent almost no available time feeding, digging, or trying to
escape. After transferring fluids, these males re-engaged in these
non-mating behaviors. In trials where males never gained intromission
(defined as the male’s thrusting movements becoming deeper and
slower), they did not demonstrate a similarly hyper-engaged mode restricted
to mating-related behaviors (n = 7, 6, 5, 6 males).
b, We defined the appetitive sniffing metric as the
fraction of pre-mounting time (i.e. the time from introduction of the female
to up to 5 minutes later or to the first mount, whichever came first) spent
in sniffing females. This metric was not significantly correlated with
mounting latency (n = 47 first mounts from 20 males).
c, About 80% of the first mounts were immediately
preceded by a bout of sniffing (black arrows). This fraction gradually
dropped across subsequent mounts, to about 5% for the fourth and fifth
mounts (1st mounts: n = 48; 2nd and 3rd mounts: n =
52; 4th and 5th mounts: n = 49 mounts; 20 males).
***p<0.001. See Supplementary Table 1 for
statistics.