Changes in behaviour associated with pair formation in the polychaeteHarmothoë imbricata(L.)

Abstract
Spacing between individuals in populations of Harmothoë imbricata has been investigated both on the shore and in the laboratory. Males tend to occur closer together than females, and the mean male‐male individual distance measured was less than the mean distance between females; male—female distances for immature worms were intermediate. When worms mature they pair: the male mounts the female and lies across her dorsal surface. There is evidence that after spawning the members of a pair separate. Contact responses between worms have been investigated in the laboratory. Most encounters between immature worms lead to separation, as a result of one or both worms moving rapidly away from the other or fighting; females show more marked avoidance behaviour than males. The majority of male‐male and female‐female encounters between mature worms also lead to separation but in male‐female encounters the male usually mounts the female. A male which has mounted a female becomes highly aggressive and will attack intruding males but not females.