Together but not intertwined: differences in sexual behavior between two sympatric and synchronic spider species, including one new synonymy (Araneae: Tetragnathidae: Tetragnatha)

Species recognition and reproductive isolation are critical for organisms to prevent expensive and unsuccessful matings. This may be particularly important in closely related species that coexist synchronously in the same habitat, and for which reproductive barriers are not entirely effective. Tetra...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of arachnology 2022-05, Vol.50 (1), p.67-80
Hauptverfasser: Cargnelutti, Franco, Bollatti, Fedra, Izquierdo, Matías A, Castanheira, Pedro de S, Cerqueira Baptista, Renner Luiz, Barrantes, Gilbert, Aisenberg, Anita
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container_end_page 80
container_issue 1
container_start_page 67
container_title The Journal of arachnology
container_volume 50
creator Cargnelutti, Franco
Bollatti, Fedra
Izquierdo, Matías A
Castanheira, Pedro de S
Cerqueira Baptista, Renner Luiz
Barrantes, Gilbert
Aisenberg, Anita
description Species recognition and reproductive isolation are critical for organisms to prevent expensive and unsuccessful matings. This may be particularly important in closely related species that coexist synchronously in the same habitat, and for which reproductive barriers are not entirely effective. Tetragnatha argentinensisMello-Leitão, 1931 and T. nitens (Audouin, 1826) are two long-jawed orb weaver spiders whose feeding grounds and reproductive phenology overlap extensively. Since general patterns of sexual behavior observed in the field showed no apparent differences between these two species, we proposed to evaluate the occurrence of heterospecific mating, and explored the occurrence of potential reproductive isolation mechanisms between them by analyzing in fine scale the mating behaviors of each species and sex. We observed only one heterospecific mating, and few or no sexual interactions occurred in other crossed trials. We found that both species showed similar general mating patterns, however, there are some subtle differences between them. In T. nitens, males clasped the female's chelicerae with their own, but the opposite occurred in T. argentinensis. Moreover, males of T. nitens produced fewer hematodochal inflations, lower number of flubs, and shorter insertions than males of T. argentinensis. Females of T. argentinensis vibrated their abdomen at a higher rate. Our results indicate that these sympatric Tetragnatha species have successful reproductive isolation that probably takes place through recognition mechanisms occurring prior to mating. We provide an update on the taxonomic status of T. argentinensis and its distribution, and a new junior synonymy.
doi_str_mv 10.1636/JoA-S-21-006
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects Analysis
FEATURED ARTICLES
Long-jawed spiders
pre-mating recognition
reproductive isolation
Sex
Spiders
sympatric species
title Together but not intertwined: differences in sexual behavior between two sympatric and synchronic spider species, including one new synonymy (Araneae: Tetragnathidae: Tetragnatha)
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