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Dryad

Data from : Hunger-dependent female receptivity leads to variable optimal polyandry with equal fitness in a nuptial gift-giving spider

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Apr 23, 2025 version files 19.15 KB

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Abstract

Female mating decisions are often plastic, dependent on the environment. In the nuptial gift-giving spider Pisaura mirabilis, the optimal number of matings for females depends on prey availability and is regulated by hunger-dependent receptivity. We determined the lower and upper optimal number of matings for females and test the hypothesis that females that obtain the optimal number of matings will receive that same reproductive success independently of what the optimal number is. In laboratory experiments, females were offered 0, 1, 2 or 3 house flies per day as supplementary feeding and were daily presented with 4 gift-carrying males until oviposition. Fecundity, oviposition latency, egg hatching success, and the number of live spiderlings were independent of the level of supplementary feeding. We established a trade-off between mating and aggression (i.e. gift stealing and sexual cannibalism), which are alternative ways of compensating for low foraging success. We confirmed 2-3 as the minimum optimal number of matings. The maximum optimal number of matings varied between 12 and 22-24 depending on the females’ level of aggression. Thus, female behavioral plasticity allows them to decouple their fitness from dependence on environmental prey availability through hunger-dependent receptivity.