4.4 Article

Sex-specific life-history strategies among immature jumping spiders: differences in body parameters and behavior

Journal

CURRENT ZOOLOGY
Volume 69, Issue 5, Pages 535-551

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cz/zoac069

Keywords

activity; behavioral syndrome; boldness; intraindividual variability; repeatability; sexual dimorphism

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Selection forces generate sex-specific differences in various fitness-related traits in spiders. This study investigated sex-related differences in body parameters, behavioral features, and their relationships among immature individuals of the Carrhotus xanthogramma spider species. The results revealed that males have higher mass and larger prosoma than females. Males are more active and risk tolerant, while females show increasing reactions to threatening stimuli. The study also found behavioral syndromes in males and females. These results demonstrate that C. xanthogramma sexes exhibit different life-history strategies even before maturity.
Selection forces often generate sex-specific differences in various traits closely related to fitness. While in adult spiders (Araneae), sexes often differ in coloration, body size, antipredator, or foraging behavior, such sex-related differences are less pronounced among immatures. However, sex-specific life-history strategies may also be adaptive for immatures. Thus, we hypothesized that among spiders, immature individuals show different life-history strategies that are expressed as sex-specific differences in body parameters and behavioral features, and also in their relationships. We used immature individuals of a protandrous jumping spider, Carrhotus xanthogramma, and examined sex-related differences. The results showed that males have higher mass and larger prosoma than females. Males were more active and more risk tolerant than females. Male activity increased with time, and larger males tended to capture the prey faster than small ones, while females showed no such patterns. However, females reacted to the threatening abiotic stimuli more with the increasing number of test sessions. In both males and females, individuals with better body conditions tended to be more risk averse. Spiders showed no sex-specific differences in interindividual behavioral consistency and in intraindividual behavioral variation in the measured behavioral traits. Finally, we also found evidence for behavioral syndromes (i.e., correlation between different behaviors), where in males, only the activity correlated with the risk-taking behavior, but in females, all the measured behavioral traits were involved. The present study demonstrates that C. xanthogramma sexes follow different life-history strategies even before attaining maturity.

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