Abstract

BackgroundSexual selection has been considered to promote diversification and speciation. Sexually dimorphic species have been used to explore the supposed effect, however, with mixed results. In dwarf spiders (Erigoninae), many species are sexually dimorphic—males possess marked prosomal modifications. These male traits vary from moderate elevations to bizarre shapes in various prosomal regions. Previous studies established that male dwarf spiders produce substances in these prosomal modifications that are taken up by the females. These substances can act as nuptial gifts, which increase the mating probability of males and the oviposition rate in females. Therefore, these dimorphic traits have evolved in the context of sexual selection. Here, we explore the evolutionary lability of this gustatory trait complex with the aim of assessing the role of this trait complex in species divergence by investigating (1) if erigonine modified prosomata are inherently linked to nuptial-gift-producing glands, (2) if the evolution of the glands evolution preceded that of the modified prosomal shapes, and by assessing (3) the occurrence of convergent/divergent evolution and cryptic differentiation.ResultsWe reconstructed the position and extent of the glandular tissue along with the muscular anatomy in the anterior part of the prosoma of 76 erigonine spiders and three outgroup species using X-ray micro-computed tomography. In all but one case, modified prosomata are associated with gustatory glands. We incorporated the location of glands and muscles into an existing matrix of somatic and genitalic morphological traits of these taxa and reanalyzed their phylogenetic relationship. Our analysis supports that the possession of glandular equipment is the ancestral state and that the manifold modifications of the prosomal shape have evolved convergently multiple times. We found differences in gland position between species with both modified and unmodified prosomata, and reported on seven cases of gland loss.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that the occurrence of gustatory glands in sexually monomorphic ancestors has set the stage for the evolution of diverse dimorphic external modifications in dwarf spiders. Differences among congeners suggest that the gland position is highly susceptible to evolutionary changes. The multiple incidences might reflect costs of glandular tissue maintenance and nuptial feeding. Our results indicate divergent evolutionary patterns of gustatory-courtship-related traits, and thus a likely facilitating effect of sexual selection on speciation.

Highlights

  • Sexual selection has been considered to promote diversification and speciation

  • An evolutionary scenario depicting an origin of internal gustatory glandular tissues prior to the diversification of external morphologies [36, 40] has been proposed based on several erigonine phylogenetic frameworks in which external morphological characters were analyzed [26, 66, 67]

  • The connections of the anterior filaments of the inter-cheliceral-sclerite muscle and the anterior pharyngeal dilator to the pre-Posterior median eyes (PME) groove in species like Mitrager sexoculorum and M. lucida seem to be related to the internal position of the PMEs close to the upper side of the groove

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Sexual selection has been considered to promote diversification and speciation. Sexually dimorphic species have been used to explore the supposed effect, with mixed results. These substances can act as nuptial gifts, which increase the mating probability of males and the oviposition rate in females These dimorphic traits have evolved in the context of sexual selection. Sexual dimorphism may have evolved under the influence of ecological selection mechanisms These include niche divergence between the sexes [11], such as the larger posterior salivary glands in male octopod Eledonella pygmaea due to intersexual vertical habitat partitioning in the water column and resulting differences in feeding habits [12]; and reproductive role division [13], like the female gigantism in many orb-weaving spiders selected for increased fecundity [14, 15]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call