Inger L. Drengsgaard’s research while affiliated with Aarhus University and other places

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Publications (1)


Sperm Competition in a Nuptial Feeding Spider, Pisaura Mirabilis
  • Article

August 1999

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74 Reads

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52 Citations

Behaviour

Inger L. Drengsgaard

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The paper tests two hypotheses about sperm priority in the spider Pisaura mirabilis. A 'phylogenetic constraints hypothesis' states that since the females have conduit spermathecae, first male priority should prevail. On the other hand, males offer nuptial prey to the females and females mate with multiple males. The evolution of these traits is most easily understood if late mating males also have a substantial fertilization success. The results indicate a compromise solution. Sterile-male technique with double-mated females indicated a first male priority pattern (P1 = ca 70%, after adjusting for sterilization damage and experimental mortality). However, the success of the fourth male of quadroublemated females was unexpectedly high (adjusted P4 = ca 24%, not different from P of 2 two-male matings). This lends support to a supplementary hypothesis of constant last male success, which may turn an initial first-male advantage into a last-male advantage, when the number of males mating with a female raises above a certain number. Independent of mating order, males may increase their share of fertilizations by long copulation times. It was tested whether female choice for symmetric males might account for differential male success. However, fluctuating asymmetry (FA) in male leg length showed no relationships with fertilization success or copulation duration.

Citations (1)


... For males the investment in food gifts would be inevitably shared with the fertilizations of other males and thus, they should invest in nutritive gifts when the paternity to acquire is highly probable. The reports on paternity patterns in gift-giving spiders are still inconsistent, with successful paternity varying from the longest mating duration, to the first male, to no pattern at all, according to the number of matings acquired by the females (Drengsgaard and Toft 1999;Matzke et al. 2022). In our studied population paternity can be monopolised by large males (Albo et al. 2023), which are highly competitive as they are able to invest in nutritive gifts and in addition benefit from longer mating durations because of their size . ...

Reference:

When all males cheat post-copulatory competition limits worthless gift-giving frequency in spiders
Sperm Competition in a Nuptial Feeding Spider, Pisaura Mirabilis
  • Citing Article
  • August 1999

Behaviour