Abstract

BackgroundIn nuptial gift-giving species, benefits of acquiring a mate may select for male deception by donation of worthless gifts. We investigated the effect of worthless gifts on mating success in the spider Pisaura mirabilis. Males usually offer an insect prey wrapped in silk; however, worthless gifts containing inedible items are reported. We tested male mating success in the following experimental groups: protein enriched fly gift (PG), regular fly gift (FG), worthless gift (WG), or no gift (NG).ResultsMales that offered worthless gifts acquired similar mating success as males offering nutritional gifts, while males with no gift experienced reduced mating success. The results suggest that strong selection on the nuptial gift-giving trait facilitates male deception by donation of worthless gifts. Females terminated matings faster when males offered worthless donations; this demonstrate a cost of deception for the males as shorter matings lead to reduced sperm transfer and thus give the deceiving males a disadvantage in sperm competition.ConclusionWe propose that the gift wrapping trait allows males to exploit female foraging preference by disguising the gift content thus deceiving females into mating without acquiring direct benefits. Female preference for a genuine prey gift combined with control over mating duration, however, counteracts the male deception.

Highlights

  • In nuptial gift-giving species, benefits of acquiring a mate may select for male deception by donation of worthless gifts

  • worthless gift (WG) males experienced a 20% shorter mating duration compared with protein enriched fly gift (PG) and fly gift (FG) males, this effect was not statistically significant (Figure 2A)

  • Oviposition, spiderling emergence and female life span We found no significant differences in the proportion of mated females that constructed an egg-sac among groups; (20) PG females, (20) FG females, 12 (12) WG females and 8 (9) no gift (NG) females constructed an eggsac (Chi-Square test: c2yates = 0.20, p = 0.97, df = 3)

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Summary

Introduction

In nuptial gift-giving species, benefits of acquiring a mate may select for male deception by donation of worthless gifts. Differences in the evolutionary interests between the sexes over maximizing reproductive success commonly lead to inter-sexual conflict [1,2]. This conflict influences the opportunity, form and intensity of sexual selection that drives the evolution of traits that enhance mating success [3]. In species where males provide females with a nuptial gift during mating, there is particular scope for males to manipulate females to acquire matings and prolong copulation to enhance their fertilization success [4,5,6]. Female choice for males with nuptial gifts could lead to

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