Prey to predator body size ratio in the evolution of cooperative hunting-a social spider test case.

IF 0.8 3区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY
Development Genes and Evolution Pub Date : 2020-03-01 Epub Date: 2019-11-25 DOI:10.1007/s00427-019-00640-w
Lena Grinsted, Mads F Schou, Virginia Settepani, Christina Holm, Tharina L Bird, Trine Bilde
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

One of the benefits of cooperative hunting may be that predators can subdue larger prey. In spiders, cooperative, social species can capture prey many times larger than an individual predator. However, we propose that cooperative prey capture does not have to be associated with larger caught prey per se, but with an increase in the ratio of prey to predator body size. This can be achieved either by catching larger prey while keeping predator body size constant, or by evolving a smaller predator body size while maintaining capture of large prey. We show that within a genus of relatively large spiders, Stegodyphus, subsocial spiders representing the ancestral state of social species are capable of catching the largest prey available in the environment. Hence, within this genus, the evolution of cooperation would not provide access to otherwise inaccessible, large prey. Instead, we show that social Stegodyphus spiders are smaller than their subsocial counterparts, while catching similar sized prey, leading to the predicted increase in prey-predator size ratio with sociality. We further show that in a genus of small spiders, Anelosimus, the level of sociality is associated with an increased size of prey caught while predator size is unaffected by sociality, leading to a similar, predicted increase in prey-predator size ratio. In summary, we find support for our proposed 'prey to predator size ratio hypothesis' and discuss how relaxed selection on large body size in the evolution of social, cooperative living may provide adaptive benefits for ancestrally relatively large predators.

合作狩猎进化中的猎物与捕食者体型比例——一个社会性蜘蛛的测试案例。
合作狩猎的好处之一可能是捕食者可以制服更大的猎物。在蜘蛛中,合作、群居的物种可以捕获比单个捕食者大许多倍的猎物。然而,我们认为合作捕食并不一定与更大的猎物本身有关,而是与猎物与捕食者体型之比的增加有关。这可以通过捕捉较大的猎物,同时保持捕食者的体型不变,或者通过进化出较小的捕食者体型,同时保持捕获大型猎物来实现。我们发现,在一个相对较大的蜘蛛属——剑龙蛛中,亚社会性蜘蛛代表了社会性物种的祖先状态,能够捕捉环境中最大的猎物。因此,在这个属中,合作的进化不会提供获取其他难以接近的大型猎物的途径。相反,我们发现社会性剑齿虎蜘蛛比亚社会性剑齿虎蜘蛛更小,而捕获的猎物大小相似,导致预测的猎物-捕食者尺寸比随着社会性而增加。我们进一步表明,在小蜘蛛属Anelosimus中,社会性水平与捕获的猎物大小的增加有关,而捕食者的大小不受社会性的影响,导致类似的,预测的猎物-捕食者大小比的增加。总之,我们找到了“猎物与捕食者体型比假说”的支持,并讨论了在社会、合作生活的进化过程中,对大体型的宽松选择如何为祖先相对较大的捕食者提供适应性利益。
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
Development Genes and Evolution
Development Genes and Evolution 生物-发育生物学
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Development Genes and Evolution publishes high-quality reports on all aspects of development biology and evolutionary biology. The journal reports on experimental and bioinformatics work at the systemic, cellular and molecular levels in the field of animal and plant systems, covering key aspects of the following topics: Embryological and genetic analysis of model and non-model organisms Genes and pattern formation in invertebrates, vertebrates and plants Axial patterning, embryonic induction and fate maps Cellular mechanisms of morphogenesis and organogenesis Stem cells and regeneration Functional genomics of developmental processes Developmental diversity and evolution Evolution of developmentally relevant genes Phylogeny of animals and plants Microevolution Paleontology.
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