4.7 Article

Challenging monogamy in a spider with nontraditional sexual behavior

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-09777-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET)
  2. SECyT-UNC
  3. FONCYT
  4. Sistema Nacional de Investigacion (ANII)
  5. Programa de Desarrollo de las Ciencias Basicas, UdelaR, Uruguay
  6. Fondo Clemente Estable (ANII) [FCE 1_2017_1_136269]
  7. National Geographic Society [WW204R_17]

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Allocosasenex is a sex-role reversed spider where males construct burrows in sand and wait for females to approach. Females lay eggs in the burrows and leave, making mating opportunities dangerous. The study found that copulated females respond to courtship from new males and engage in a second copulation, increasing their reproductive success.
Each species and sex can develop different reproductive strategies to optimize their fitness while assigning reproductive effort. Allocosasenex is a sex-role reversed spider whose males construct long burrows in the sand. They wait for wandering females to approach, assess their sexual partners and donate their constructions to females after copulation. Females stay in the burrow and lay their egg-sac. When offspring are ready for dispersion, females leave the burrow and gain access to new mating opportunities. Males are choosy during mate courtship, preferring to mate with virgin females over copulated ones, which can even be cannibalized if males reject them. This situation turns new mating opportunities dangerous for copulated females. We wondered whether a copulated female inside the previous mate's burrow responds to courtship from a new male and if this new male can copulate, avoiding burrow construction costs. We also explored whether courtship and copulation behaviors during the first sexual encounter affected the probability of occurrence of a second copulation. For that purposes we exposed copulated females inside male burrows to new males (non-donor males). Males could locate and court females inside the previous male's burrow, and females accepted a second copulation. Hence, A.senex females are not monogamous as was expected but increase their reproductive success by copulating with non-donor males. Also, males can develop opportunistic tactics, suggesting a more dynamic mating system for this sex-role reversed spider than assumed.

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