Does female control and male mating system predict courtship investment and mating outcomes? A comparative study in five widow spider species (genus Latrodectus) tested under similar laboratory conditions.

IF 2.3 Q2 ECOLOGY
Luciana Baruffaldi, Maydianne C B Andrade
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Abstract

Background: Male courtship investment may evolve in response to the male's expectation of future mating opportunities or the degree of female control during mating interactions. We used a comparative approach to test this hypotheses by assessing the courtship and mating behaviors of five widow spider species (genus Latrodectus) under common laboratory conditions. We predicted male investment in courtship would be higher in species where males mate only once because of high cannibalism rates (monogyny, L. geometricus, L. hasselti, L. mirabilis), compared to species with rare cannibalism (L. mactans, L. hesperus) in which males should reserve energy for future mating opportunities. Increased male investment, measured as courtship duration, might also evolve with increased female control over mating outcomes if females prefer longer courtships. We tested this by assessing the frequency of copulations, timing of sexual cannibalism, and the degree of female-biased size dimorphism, which is expected to be negatively correlated with the energetic cost of rebuffing male mating attempts.

Results: Copulation frequency was consistently lower in species with extreme female-skewed size dimorphism, and where sexual cannibalism was more prevalent, suggesting the importance of female control for mating outcomes. We confirmed significant interspecific variation in average courtship duration, but contrary to predictions, it was not predicted by male mating system, and there was no consistent link between courtship duration and sexual size dimorphism.

Conclusion: We show that the degree of sexual dimorphism is not only correlated with sexual cannibalism, but also with mating success since restriction of male copulation frequency by female Latrodectus affects paternity. However, predictions about male mating system or female control affecting courtship duration were not supported. We propose that the form of female control over mating and cannibalism, and male responses, might be more informative for understanding the evolution of courtship duration. For example, male tactics to avoid female aggression may drive lower courtship duration in species like L. mirabilis. Nonetheless, our results differ from inferences based on published studies of each species in isolation, illuminating the need for standardized data collection for behavioural comparative studies.

Abstract Image

雌性控制和雄性交配系统能预测求偶投资和交配结果吗?在类似实验室条件下对五种寡妇蛛(Latrodectus 属)进行的比较研究。
背景:雄性求偶投资的演变可能与雄性对未来交配机会的预期或雌性在交配互动中的控制程度有关。我们采用了一种比较方法来验证这一假设,即在普通实验室条件下评估五种寡妇蛛(Latrodectus属)的求偶和交配行为。我们预测,在雄性只交配一次的物种中,雄性的求偶投资会更高,因为这些物种的食人率很高(monogyny,L. geometricus,L. hasselti,L. mirabilis),而在食人较少的物种中(L. mactans,L. hesperus),雄性应该为未来的交配机会储备能量。如果雌性更喜欢较长的求偶过程,那么以求偶持续时间来衡量的雄性投资的增加也可能随着雌性对交配结果控制的增加而进化。我们通过评估交配频率、性食人的时间以及雌性偏好的体型二态程度来验证这一点,预计雌性偏好的体型二态程度与拒绝雄性交配尝试的能量成本呈负相关:结果:在雌性体型极度偏斜的物种中,交配频率一直较低;在性食人现象更普遍的物种中,交配频率也更低,这表明雌性对交配结果的控制非常重要。我们证实了平均求偶持续时间在种间存在显著差异,但与预测相反,雄性交配系统并不能预测求偶持续时间,而且求偶持续时间与性器官大小二形性之间也没有一致的联系:结论:我们的研究表明,性二型的程度不仅与性食人有关,而且与交配成功率有关,因为雌性拉特罗得克特鼠对雄性交配频率的限制会影响父子关系。然而,关于雄性交配系统或雌性控制影响求偶持续时间的预测并未得到支持。我们建议,雌性对交配和食人的控制形式以及雄性的反应可能更有助于理解求偶持续时间的进化。例如,雄性避免雌性攻击的策略可能会降低求偶持续时间。尽管如此,我们的研究结果与已发表的对每个物种单独研究的推断不同,这说明行为比较研究需要标准化的数据收集。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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