4.5 Article

Climate change and sexual size dimorphism in an Arctic spider

Journal

BIOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 5, Issue 4, Pages 542-544

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2009.0169

Keywords

body size; carapace width; life cycle; Pardosa glacialis; sexual size dimorphism

Funding

  1. SYNTHESYS [dk-taf 1952]

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Climate change is advancing the onset of the growing season and this is happening at a particularly fast rate in the High Arctic. However, in most species the relative fitness implications for males and females remain elusive. Here, we present data on 10 successive cohorts of the wolf spider Pardosa glacialis from Zackenberg in High-Arctic, northeast Greenland. We found marked inter-annual variation in adult body size (carapace width) and this variation was greater in females than in males. Earlier snowmelt during both years of its biennial maturation resulted in larger adult body sizes and a skew towards positive sexual size dimorphism (females bigger than males). These results illustrate the pervasive influence of climate on key life-history traits and indicate that male and female responses to climate should be investigated separately whenever possible.

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