Males of a sexually cannibalistic spider chemically assess relative female quality.

IF 3.4 Q1 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Anna-Lena Cory, Jutta M Schneider
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Background: Mate choice is a taxonomically wide-spread phenomenon, mostly exerted by females although male mate choice occurs as well. While costs and benefits of choosiness have been well studied, the underlying mechanisms are largely unclear. Different models exist, namely best-of-n or threshold rules, based on sequential or simultaneous sampling, which differ in the required cognitive demands. We applied an experimental approach to shed light on the underlying mechanisms of male mate choice in the sexually cannibalistic spider Argiope bruennichi. Males are limited to two copulations and preferentially monopolise large females, while they may leave smaller females after a single copulation and resume mate search. Here, we utilised significant size-differences between females from Northern and Southern populations and presented males with three different-sized females that were matched for origin: all three females originated either from the same Northern European population as the males or from Southern populations where the smallest female was about the same size as the largest Northern female. This allowed testing the hypothesis that males base their mating tactic on a fixed local size threshold. We predicted Northern males to be choosy among Northern females, but to accept all Southern females since they would all be above that threshold.

Results: Males copulated with the first female they encountered, which was independent of her body size. Regardless of the females' origins, males chose a monogynous tactic with the largest female in the trio, while they left the smallest female after one copulation. The same pattern applied to Southern females even though the smallest females in the trio were of a similar size as monopolised Northern females. Since males have poor eyesight and did not actively sample all females, they likely have gained information about relative size differences between females based on volatile chemical cues only.

Conclusions: Our findings suggest that male A. bruennichi can assess relative differences in mate quality and adjust their mating tactic to the prevailing conditions (Northern vs. Southern). We reject the presence of a locally-adapted fixed threshold and argue that our results are best explained by an adjustable threshold that was raised under Southern conditions.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

性同类相食的雄性蜘蛛用化学方法评估雌性蜘蛛的相对品质。
背景:交配选择是一种分类学上广泛存在的现象,虽然雄性也会选择配偶,但主要由雌性进行选择。虽然挑剔的成本和收益已经得到了很好的研究,但潜在的机制在很大程度上还不清楚。存在不同的模型,即基于顺序或同时采样的n最佳规则或阈值规则,其所需的认知需求不同。我们采用实验方法来阐明性同类相食蜘蛛Argiope bruennichi雄性配偶选择的潜在机制。雄性被限制在两次交配中,并优先垄断大型雌性,而它们可能在一次交配后离开较小的雌性并继续寻找配偶。在这里,我们利用了来自北方和南方种群的雌性之间的显著尺寸差异,并向雄性提供了三个不同大小的雌性,它们的起源相匹配:这三只雌性要么来自与雄性相同的北欧种群,要么来自最小的雌性与最大的北方雌性大致相同的南方种群。这就验证了一个假设,即雄性的交配策略是基于一个固定的局部尺寸阈值。我们预测北方男性会在北方女性中挑剔,但会接受所有南方女性,因为她们都超过了这个门槛。结果:雄性与它们遇到的第一个雌性交配,这与雌性的体型无关。不管雌性的出身如何,雄性会选择与三胞胎中最大的雌性交配,而在交配一次后,它们会离开最小的雌性。同样的模式也适用于南方的雌性,尽管三重奏中最小的雌性与被垄断的北方雌性体型相似。由于雄性的视力较差,并且没有主动对所有的雌性进行取样,它们可能只根据挥发性化学物质的线索获得了雌性之间相对大小差异的信息。结论:本研究结果表明,雄性布鲁尼奇沙蚤能够评估配偶质量的相对差异,并根据当时的条件(北方与南方)调整交配策略。我们拒绝存在一个适合当地的固定阈值,并认为我们的结果最好是用一个在南方条件下提高的可调节阈值来解释。
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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来源期刊
BMC Evolutionary Biology
BMC Evolutionary Biology 生物-进化生物学
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: BMC Evolutionary Biology is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of molecular and non-molecular evolution of all organisms, as well as phylogenetics and palaeontology.
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