2016
DOI: 10.1111/jeb.12848
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One size fits all? Determinants of sperm transfer in a highly dimorphic orb‐web spider

Abstract: The evolutionary significance of widespread hypo-allometric scaling of genital traits in combination with rapid interspecific genital trait divergence has been of key interest to evolutionary biologists for many years and remains poorly understood. Here, we provide a detailed assessment of quantitative genital trait variation in males and females of the sexually highly dimorphic and cannibalistic orb-weaving spider Argiope aurantia. We then test how this trait variation relates to sperm transfer success. In pa… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 87 publications
(169 reference statements)
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“…In some species, male size is positively related to increased sperm quantity and increased sperm transfer (e.g. Assis & Foellmer, 2016;Ceballos, Jones, & Elgar, 2015;Wiernasz, Sater, Abell, & Cole, 2001), but we found no evidence that male size influences the initial amount of sperm stored in male's pedipalps or the amount of sperm that males transfer to female P. mira. Similar levels of variation in the number of sperm stored in virgin males' pedipalps has been observed in other spider species (e.g.…”
Section: Insertion Number and Sperm Quantitycontrasting
confidence: 84%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In some species, male size is positively related to increased sperm quantity and increased sperm transfer (e.g. Assis & Foellmer, 2016;Ceballos, Jones, & Elgar, 2015;Wiernasz, Sater, Abell, & Cole, 2001), but we found no evidence that male size influences the initial amount of sperm stored in male's pedipalps or the amount of sperm that males transfer to female P. mira. Similar levels of variation in the number of sperm stored in virgin males' pedipalps has been observed in other spider species (e.g.…”
Section: Insertion Number and Sperm Quantitycontrasting
confidence: 84%
“…Eberhard, 1996;Herberstein et al, 2011). Indeed, several studies have failed to find a relationship between copulation duration and fertilization success (Assis & Foellmer, 2016;Gilchrist & Partridge, 2000;Mazzi et al, 2009). Thus, in attempting to understanding male-female mating dynamics and potential costs and benefits of copulation duration, it is important to directly quantify the relationships between copulation duration, sperm transfer, and fertilization success, as well as their relationship to female and male size.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second possibility is that females may use the entire sperm storage from the first male to fertilize the eggs laid in the initial egg sacs, especially if the copulation duration of the first partner is low or he produces less sperm than the second one (Assis & Foellmer, 2016). Females may also dump the sperm from their spermathecae, such as observed in other spider species (Eberhard, 2009).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three regression methods, ordinary least squares (OLS), major axis (MA) and reduced major axis (RMA), have been widely applied for estimating allometric scaling relationships (Eberhard, 2009), and there have been extensive debates on which methods are more appropriate (Bertin & Fairbairn, 2007; Bonduriansky, 2007; Eberhard, 2009; Rodríguez et al ., 2015a). Following an approach in Assis & Foellmer (2016), we presented the results from all three methods, but relied more on the OLS estimates in the results and discussion because the other regressions confound the scatter of the measurements with variation in slope and can be biased towards isometry for the log‐log transformed variables (Voje & Hansen, 2013; Rodríguez et al ., 2015a; Assis & Foellmer, 2016). The slope estimates were tested if differed significantly from the null hypothesis of isometry (slope = 1) using the SMATR package in R (Warton et al ., 2012).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%