Abstract
Austad (1984) proposed a relation between female spermathecal anatomy and sperm priority, such that in a haplogyne spider with “cul-de-sac” spermathecae a last-male sperm priority was expected. A laboratory experiment using both normal and irradiated males (sterile-male technique) confirmed this prediction; last males fertilized ca. 70% of eggs in the first egg sac of double-mated females. Mating series with up to four males indicate an antichronological order of male success. Thus, when females laid multiple egg sacs, earlier males fertilized an increasing proportion of eggs in successive sacs. In nature this effect may be counteracted by the fact that females remate between sacs. These statistical patterns emerged in spite of considerable randomness in paternity order. Field observations showed that males survived as long as females (constant sex ratio throughout the breeding season), an unusual feature for a spider population. Mating frequency could not be determined in the field, but laboratory trials indicated that encounters between the sexes usually resulted in immediate copulation. No guarding of females or serious fights between males were observed. Males were observed to steal prey from females and to prey on subadult females. High feeding rates and lack of aggressiveness in males are tactics that secure survival into the egg-laying period. However males also mated frequently early in the maturity season; this is seen as a tactic to maximize the total amount of sperm surviving to the time of fertilization. Thus, survival and multiple matings are the key factors for male success.
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