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Journal Article

Citation

Andrade MCB, Gu L, Stoltz JA. Biol. Lett. 2005; 1(3): 276-279.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, Royal Society Publishing)

DOI

10.1098/rsbl.2005.0318

PMID

17148186

PMCID

PMC1617149

Abstract

Male redback spiders (Latrodectus hasselti) maximize paternity if they copulate twice with their cannibalistic mate. Facilitating cannibalistic attack during their first copulation yields paternity benefits. However, females have paired sperm-storage organs inseminated during two separate copulations, so males that succumb to partial cannibalism during the first copulation lose at least 50% of their paternity to rivals. In this paper, we describe a novel male trait--an abdominal constriction that appears during courtship--that allows males to survive and mate with females for a second time, despite the substantial cannibalistic damage inflicted during the first copulation. Constricted males that were wounded to simulate early cannibalism had higher endurance, greater survivorship, longer subsequent courtship and higher mating success than wounded males that were not constricted. Constriction was not found in a non-sacrificial congener that rarely survived simulated cannibalism, and the protective effect of constriction in redbacks was specific to the type of damage inflicted by females during the first copulation. Thus, the abdominal constriction allows males to overcome the potential fitness limit imposed by their own suicidal strategy-paradoxically, by prolonging survival across two cannibalistic copulations.


Language: en

Keywords

Animals; Cannibalism; Copulation; Female; Male; Mating Preference, Animal; Models, Biological; Sexual Behavior, Animal; Spermatozoa; Spiders; Suicide; Survival

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