The rate of gregariousness and intra- and inter-specific attractivity were evaluated under laboratory conditions in five species
of Dermaptera. The three species of the genus
Forficula (
Forficula auricularia L.,
F. decipiens Gené and
F. pubescens Gené) showed distinctly gregarious behaviour in old larvae and adults in the pre-reproductive phase. This gregariousness
was seen at the intraspecific level and also among individuals of different species. The other two species,
Labidura riparia Pallas and
Euborellia moesta Gené, were randomly distributed over the available shelters, with no distinct tendency for aggregation or isolation. In individual
tests, insects of all five species were attracted by shelters previously visited by conspecifics in preference to control
shelters. For the two non-gregarious species, this phenomenon might function as a burrow marker. The same tests showed an
interattractivity for four of the species studied. Only
L. riparia did not respond to the trails of the four other species, although its trails were attractive to the other species. The pheromonal
nature of the substances involved in the interspecific relationships and the involvement of behaviour in the biology and speciation
of Dermaptera are discussed.
Key words Dermaptera - Aggregation pheromone - Interattractivity - Association