No pain, no gain: Male plasticity in burrow digging according to female rejection in a sand-dwelling wolf spider
•Allocosa senex males showed plasticity in burrow digging.•Male enlarged more frequently their burrows after female visit and rejection.•Burrows were longer after female rejection compared to males unexposed to females.•Males invest in burrow length when there are mating chances.•The study offers in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Behavioural processes 2017-07, Vol.140, p.174-180 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Allocosa senex males showed plasticity in burrow digging.•Male enlarged more frequently their burrows after female visit and rejection.•Burrows were longer after female rejection compared to males unexposed to females.•Males invest in burrow length when there are mating chances.•The study offers insights on male plasticity on a trait used as nuptial gift.
Behavioral plasticity allows individuals to reversibly respond to short-term variations in their ecological and social environment in order to maximize their fitness. Allocosa senex is a burrow-digging spider that inhabits the sandy coasts of South America. This species shows a reversal in typical sex roles expected in spiders: females are wanderers that visit males at their burrows and initiate courtship. They prefer males with long burrows for mating, and males prefer virgin over mated females. We tested whether female sexual rejection induced males to enlarge their burrows and if female reproductive status affected males’ responses. We exposed males who had constructed burrows to: a) virgin females or b) mated females, (n=16 for each category). If female rejection occurred, we repeated the trial 48h later with the same female. As control, we maintained a group of males without female exposure (unexposed group, n=32). Rejected males enlarged their burrows more frequently and burrows were longer compared to unexposed males. However, frequency and length of enlargement did not differ according to female reproductive status. Males of A. senex showed plasticity in digging behavior in response to the availability of females, as a way to maximize the possibilities of future mating. |
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ISSN: | 0376-6357 1872-8308 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.beproc.2017.05.007 |