Abstract

BackgroundSexual cannibalism may be a form of extreme sexual conflict in which females benefit more from feeding on males than mating with them, and males avoid aggressive, cannibalistic females in order to increase net fitness. A thorough understanding of the adaptive significance of sexual cannibalism is hindered by our ignorance of its prevalence in nature. Furthermore, there are serious doubts about the food value of males, probably because most studies that attempt to document benefits of sexual cannibalism to the female have been conducted in the laboratory with non-natural alternative prey. Thus, to understand more fully the ecology and evolution of sexual cannibalism, field experiments are needed to document the prevalence of sexual cannibalism and its benefits to females.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe conducted field experiments with the Mediterranean tarantula (Lycosa tarantula), a burrowing wolf spider, to address these issues. At natural rates of encounter with males, approximately a third of L. tarantula females cannibalized the male. The rate of sexual cannibalism increased with male availability, and females were more likely to kill and consume an approaching male if they had previously mated with another male. We show that females benefit from feeding on a male by breeding earlier, producing 30% more offspring per egg sac, and producing progeny of higher body condition. Offspring of sexually cannibalistic females dispersed earlier and were larger later in the season than spiderlings of non-cannibalistic females.Conclusions/SignificanceIn nature a substantial fraction of female L. tarantula kill and consume approaching males instead of mating with them. This behaviour is more likely to occur if the female has mated previously. Cannibalistic females have higher rates of reproduction, and produce higher-quality offspring, than non-cannibalistic females. Our findings further suggest that female L. tarantula are nutrient-limited in nature and that males are high-quality prey. The results of these field experiments support the hypothesis that sexual cannibalism is adaptive to females.

Highlights

  • Sexual cannibalism, a behaviour in which one member of a courting or copulating male-female pair consumes the other, may be widespread among some arthropods [1]

  • Fuelling the controversy is the fact that most studies seeking to determine the adaptive value of sexual cannibalism to females are not conducted under natural conditions [6,8,9,10,11,12] and there are only few correlational studies in the field [13,14]

  • Among those females who killed a potential mate before mating and who mated at least once during the experiment (20 out of 24 cannibalistic females), mated females showed a 3.46 higher rate of pre-mating sexual cannibalism than virgins (Wilcoxon matched-pairs test, Z = 3.2, P = 0.0015)

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Summary

Introduction

A behaviour in which one member of a courting or copulating male-female pair consumes the other, may be widespread among some arthropods [1]. Pre-mating sexual cannibalism entails extreme sexual conflict: females may accrue nutritional benefits by killing and consuming approaching males instead of mating with them [3], whereas males, who must approach females in order to copulate, risk being killed by the females they approach [4]. The adaptive value of pre-mating sexual cannibalism is controversial largely because there is little supporting evidence that killing and eating a potential mate benefits females at all [3,6,7,8,9,10,11]. There are serious doubts about the food value of males, probably because most studies that attempt to document benefits of sexual cannibalism to the female have been conducted in the laboratory with non-natural alternative prey. To understand more fully the ecology and evolution of sexual cannibalism, field experiments are needed to document the prevalence of sexual cannibalism and its benefits to females

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