• Title of article

    Sexual cannibalism is associated with female behavioural type, hunger state and increased hatching success

  • Author/Authors

    Aric W. Berning، نويسنده , , Ryan D.H. Gadd، نويسنده , , Kayla Sweeney، نويسنده , , Leigh MacDonald، نويسنده , , Robin Y.Y. Eng، نويسنده , , Zachary L. Hess، نويسنده , , Jonathan N. Pruitt، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    715
  • To page
    721
  • Abstract
    Precopulatory sexual cannibalism may represent the most extreme form of sexual conflict because it necessarily truncates the reproductive potential of the victim. Three of the most prominent mechanisms invoked to explain incidence of precopulatory sexual cannibalism are the ‘adaptive foraging’, ‘aggressive spillover’ and ‘mate choice’ hypotheses. These hypotheses argue that sexual cannibalism is either (1) the result of female choice, where females gauge the benefits of suitors as perspective mates versus prey, (2) a neutral (or deleterious) by-product of selection on aggressiveness in nonreproductive contexts, or (3) a mechanism by which females express their mating preferences, respectively. We tested the predictions of these hypotheses in the funnel-web spider Agelenopsis pennsylvanica using staged laboratory encounters. We then tracked numerous fitness proxies of cannibalistic versus noncannibalistic females to determine whether cannibalism was associated with increased female performance. We found that more aggressive females and those deprived of food were more likely to engage in precopulatory cannibalism. Cannibalism was not associated with male condition, male body size or female body size, nor with the mass of femalesʹ egg cases, the number of eggs therein, or the mass of individual eggs. In contrast, there was a positive association between the mass of the egg case and the number of offspring that emerged in cannibalistic females, but not in noncannibalistic females. Thus, offspring of cannibalistic mothers appear to have increased hatching success in heavier egg cases. This may represent a novel advantage associated with sexual cannibalism.
  • Keywords
    adaptive female foraging , behavioural syndrome , mate choice , sexual size dimorphism , spider
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Record number

    1284290