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| The Reproductive Success of Deceitful Males |
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| SciMed - Biology | |||
| TS-Si News Service | |||
| Tuesday, 15 November 2011 16:00 | |||
Aarhus, Denmark. New research examines the reproductive success of deceitful males and shows that females are not impressed by worthless gifts.Male nursery web spiders (Pisaura mirabilis) prepare silk-wrapped gifts for potential mates. Most contain insects, but some are inedible plant seeds or empty exoskeletons left (presumably by the male) after consuming the prey. Males will also play dead if a female moves away and then attempt to reestablish mating. The benefit of the gift is longer mating, which leads to more sperm being transferred, and potentially a higher number of offspring. However, the females are wise to the deception and terminate mating early for worthless gifts. Maria Albo of Aarhus University said "The evolution of male deceit involves a complex equation of costs and benefits. It costs the males to find and wrap a gift, but these costs can be reduced if the male does not have to first catch his gift, or gives one that has already been eaten."![]() These are nursery web spiders (Pisaura mirabilis) with gift.Research findings appear in the journal BMC Evolutionary Biology. Male spiders were provided with either a potential gift of a fly, or a worthless item, such as a cotton wool ball, a dry flower head, a prey leftover (previously eaten housefly), or no gift at all. All the gifts were approximately the same size, so the females would not be able to tell what the gift was without unwrapping it. Males that offered any gift were more likely to successfully mate than males without. However the length of time the females allowed males with worthless gifts to spend transferring sperm was shorter than those with edible gifts (and even shorter for those with no gift at all). It appears that both male and female spiders are apparently able to assess the value of the gift and modify their behavior accordingly. Not only did the female spiders end mating sooner with an inedible gift, but male death feigning (thanatosis), which is triggered by the female attempting to end mating and run away with the gift, occurred in half of the matings involving an edible gift, but only once with a worthless gift. Similarly males and females were sometimes seen fighting over edible gifts, but never for a worthless gift. Albo says "The final results show that the number of eggs hatching was lower if the female had not received a gift, but there was little difference between females who had received an edible or inedible gift. The success of cheating probably explains why both strategies have co-evolved and are maintained in the population." FundingThis research was supported by The Danish Council for Independent Research. Maria J. Albo was funded by the Programa de Desarrollo de las Ciencias Básicas (PEDEClBA) in Uruguay (2009).
Citation (provisional)Worthless donations: male deception and female counter play in a nuptial gift-giving spider. Maria J Albo, Gudrun Winther, Cristina Tuni, Søren Toft and Trine Bilde. BMC Evolutionary Biology 2011; 11:329. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-11-329
Download PDF Abstract (provisional) Background. In nuptial gift-giving species, benefits of acquiring a mate may select for male deception by donation of worthless gifts. We investigated the effect of worthless gifts on mating success in the spider Pisaura mirabilis. Males usually offer an insect prey wrapped in silk; however, worthless gifts containing inedible items are reported. We tested male mating success in the following experimental groups: protein enriched fly gift (PG), regular fly gift (FG), worthless gift (WG), or no gift (NG). Results. Males that offered worthless gifts acquired similar mating success as males offering nutritional gifts, while males with no gift experienced reduced mating success. The results suggest that strong selection on the nuptial gift-giving trait facilitates male deception by donation of worthless gifts. Females terminated matings faster when males offered worthless donations; this demonstrate a cost of deception for the males as shorter matings lead to reduced sperm transfer and thus give the deceiving males a disadvantage in sperm competition. Conclusion. We propose that the gift wrapping trait allows males to exploit female foraging preference by disguising the gift content thus deceiving females into mating without acquiring direct benefits. Female preference for a genuine prey gift combined with control over mating duration, however, counteracts the male deception.
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 November 2011 10:31 |



Aarhus, Denmark. New research examines the reproductive success of deceitful males and shows that females are not impressed by worthless gifts.
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