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Beyond the prey: male spiders highly invest in silk when producing worthless gifts
- Source :
- PeerJ, Vol 10, p e12757 (2022)
- Publication Year :
- 2022
- Publisher :
- PeerJ Inc., 2022.
-
Abstract
- In the spider Paratrechalea ornata, males have two gift-giving mating tactics, offering either a nutritive (prey) or a worthless (prey leftovers) silk wrapped gift to females. Both gift types confer similar mating success and duration and afford males a higher success rate than when they offer no gift. If this lack of difference in the reproductive benefits is true, we would expect all males to offer a gift but some males to offer a worthless gift even if prey are available. To test this, we allowed 18 males to court multiple females over five consecutive trials. In each trial, a male was able to produce a nutritive gift (a live housefly) or a worthless gift (mealworm exuviae). We found that, in line with our predictions, 20% of the males produced worthless gifts even when they had the opportunity to produce a nutritive one. However, rather than worthless gifts being a cheap tactic, they were related to a higher investment in silk wrapping. This latter result was replicated for worthless gifts produced in both the presence and absence of a live prey item. We propose that variation in gift-giving tactics likely evolved initially as a conditional strategy related to prey availability and male condition in P. ornata. Selection may then have favoured silk wrapping as a trait involved in female attraction, leading worthless gift-giving to invade.
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 21678359 and 41618327
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- Directory of Open Access Journals
- Journal :
- PeerJ
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- edsdoj.fef4ded234b4161832752638f0c7c72
- Document Type :
- article
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.12757