The Praying Mantis sometimes kills the male during mating.
The Black Widow spider (which is not an insect) may also do this.
As soon as spawning has finished she should be removed. The male will chase the female and kill her otherwise.
A male stick insect will not lay eggs. However, a female stick insect is parthenogenetically, and can lay eggs without mating with a male.
The female will do something with her fins and let the male know but when they do mat you have to be right there when it does because the male will kill the female but not the eggs. when the eggs hatch you have to take the male out or he will kill the baby's.
No, not all insects reproduce sexually. Some insects, such as aphids and stick insects, can reproduce asexually through parthenogenesis, where females can produce offspring without mating with a male.
Answer:Some insects will eat their partner after mating, such as the Preying Mantis and the Black Widow Spider. Other animals, such as lions, have been known to kill offspring from the same species if it is not their own progeny. While still in the womb the tiger-shark will eat its siblings before being born, and many monkeys, while the same species, will kill other monkeys from rival troupes. --------------------------Humans kill their own species.
Indian stick insects are the best known of all stick insects. Males are typically smaller than females and are more aggressive, especially during mating.
Male grizzly bears may kill cubs primarily to eliminate competition for resources and to increase their chances of mating with the cubs’ mother. By killing the cubs, a male can prompt the mother to become receptive to mating sooner, allowing him to pass on his genes. This behavior, although brutal, is a strategy rooted in natural selection.
In some species the male spider seems to sacrifice itself after mating. In some species the female spider is very likely to try to catch and eat the male after mating. In many species there are special adaptations that help the male escape from the female after mating. In some species the males are tolerated and may live in little webs near to and perhaps attached to the web of the female.
Yes flowers can trick insects into mating. I have read that they insects for years have been avoiding having sex with them!
if a male is separeted during mating it can die
Mating of a female and a male to produce eggs that hatch into newborns is the way that insects make baby insects. The mating may be one-time, as in the case of Luna moths that lack mouthparts and live a little more than a week in order to breed and deposit orphaned eggs that will hatch into orphaned larvae termed caterpillars. It tends to be more frequent in southerly than in northerly habitats.
No, they do not. They try to swim away as soon as possible because after mating, the male will try to protect it's territory and the female who seemed attractive is now an invader.