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Female wētā insects have two sets of genitals and eat male ejaculate

Female short-tailed ground wētās have two sets of genitals, one to receive sperm and the other to receive extra ejaculate that they eat to survive parenting

By Alice Klein

7 April 2022

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Wētā insects on a leaf

Darryl Gwynne/University of Toronto

Females of a cricket-like insect found in New Zealand consume male ejaculate after sex to give them enough energy for the following six months of parenting, when they don’t eat. The size of the secondary genitals they use to collect ejaculate may be related to their success in mating.

Short-tailed ground wētās (Hemiandrus pallitarsis) are found on the North Island in New Zealand. Darryl Gwynne at the University of Toronto in Canada has spent decades studying the insects after first observing their unique sexual repertoire in…

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