Abstract

BackgroundDivergence in trophic niche between the sexes may function to reduce competition between the sexes (“intersexual niche partitioning hypothesis”), or may be result from differential selection among the sexes on maximizing reproductive output (“sexual selection hypothesis”). The latter may lead to higher energy demands in females driven by fecundity selection, while males invest in mate searching. We tested predictions of the two hypotheses underlying intersexual trophic niche partitioning in a natural population of spiders. Zodarion jozefienae spiders specialize on Messor barbarus ants that are polymorphic in body size and hence comprise potential trophic niches for the spider, making this system well-suited to study intersexual trophic niche partitioning.Methodology/Principal FindingsComparative analysis of trophic morphology (the chelicerae) and body size of males, females and juveniles demonstrated highly female biased SSD (Sexual Size Dimorphism) in body size, body weight, and in the size of chelicerae, the latter arising from sex-specific growth patterns in trophic morphology. In the field, female spiders actively selected ant sub-castes that were larger than the average prey size, and larger than ants captured by juveniles and males. Female fecundity was highly positively correlated with female body mass, which reflects foraging success during the adult stage. Females in laboratory experiments preferred the large ant sub-castes and displayed higher capture efficiency. In contrast, males occupied a different trophic niche and showed reduced foraging effort and reduced prey capture and feeding efficiency compared with females and juveniles.Conclusions/SignificanceOur data indicate that female-biased dimorphism in trophic morphology and body size correlate with sex-specific reproductive strategies. We propose that intersexual trophic niche partitioning is shaped primarily by fecundity selection in females, and results from sex-differences in the route to successful reproduction where females are selected to maximize energy intake and fecundity, while males switch from foraging to invest in mating effort.

Highlights

  • Divergence among the sexes in morphological traits, or in ecology, life history and behavior is widespread in the animal kingdom

  • We tested predictions of the ‘‘sexual selection’’ and ‘‘intersexual niche partitioning’’ hypotheses underlying sexual size dimorphism and intersexual trophic niche partitioning in a specialist ant predator, the spider Zodarion jozefienae in the field

  • Female biased sexual size dimorphism (SSD) was apparent in the subadult stage of spiders documenting an ontogenetic development of sexual dimorphism [28]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Divergence among the sexes in morphological traits, or in ecology, life history and behavior is widespread in the animal kingdom. The opposite pattern of female-biased SSD arise through fecundity selection on females where large body size results in more offspring [14], subsequently leading to intersexual trophic niche partitioning [15]. Divergence in trophic niche between the sexes may function to reduce competition between the sexes (‘‘intersexual niche partitioning hypothesis’’), or may be result from differential selection among the sexes on maximizing reproductive output (‘‘sexual selection hypothesis’’). The latter may lead to higher energy demands in females driven by fecundity selection, while males invest in mate searching. Zodarion jozefienae spiders specialize on Messor barbarus ants that are polymorphic in body size and comprise potential trophic niches for the spider, making this system well-suited to study intersexual trophic niche partitioning

Methods
Results
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