Abstract

Understanding the relative importance of different sources of selection (e.g., the environment, social/sexual selection) on the divergence or convergence of reproductive communication can shed light on the origin, maintenance, or even disappearance of species boundaries. Using a multistep approach, we tested the hypothesis that two presumed sister species of wolf spider with overlapping ranges and microhabitat use, yet differing degrees of sexual dimorphism, have diverged in their reliance on modality‐specific courtship signaling. We predicted that male Schizocosa crassipalpata (no ornamentation) rely predominantly on diet‐dependent vibratory signaling for mating success. In contrast, we predicted that male S. bilineata (black foreleg brushes) rely on diet‐dependent visual signaling. We first tested and corroborated the sister‐species relationship between S. crassipalpata and S. bilineata using phylogenomic scale data. Next, we tested for species‐specific, diet‐dependent vibratory and visual signaling by manipulating subadult diet and subsequently quantifying adult morphology and mature male courtship signals. As predicted, vibratory signal form was diet‐dependent in S. crassipalpata, while visual ornamentation (brush area) was diet‐dependent in S. bilineata. We then compared the species‐specific reliance on vibratory and visual signaling by recording mating across artificially manipulated signaling environments (presence/absence of each modality in a 2 × 2 full factorial design). In accordance with our diet dependence results for S. crassipalpata, the presence of vibratory signaling was important for mating success. In contrast, the light and vibratory environment interacted to influence mating success in S. bilineata, with vibratory signaling being important only in the absence of light. We found no differences in overall activity patterns. Given that these species overlap in much of their range and microhabitat use, we suggest that competition for signaling space may have led to the divergence and differential use of sensory modalities between these sister species.

Highlights

  • Among closely related animal taxa, there often exist elaboration, complexity, and diversity in traits associated with signaling

  • We recovered the sister relationship of S. crassipalpata and S. bilineata, consistent with phylogenies based on mitochondrial sequences and morphology (Fowler-Finn et al, 2015; Hebets et al, 2013; Stratton, 2005)

  • Given the divergence in modality-specific courtship signal reliance we found between S. crassipalpata and S. bilineata, we wanted to test the hypothesis that the species diverged in their temporal activity patterns

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Summary

Introduction

Among closely related animal taxa, there often exist elaboration, complexity, and diversity in traits associated with signaling. Even within individual signaling modalities, many closely related taxa express remarkable differences in signaling. For example, great variation among electric signals of mormyrid fish (Arnegard et al, 2010; Hopkins, 1981). Research testing the relative roles and importance of different drivers of signal divergence—for example, ecological, genetic, and social/sexual selection—remains an active and stimulating field of study (Bailey et al, 2019; Derryberry et al, 2018; Garcia et al, 2020; Hebets et al, 2013; Wilkins et al, 2018)

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