| Literature DB >> 24356181 |
Anne E Wignall1, Marie E Herberstein1.
Abstract
During courtship, individuals transfer information about identity, mating status and quality. However, male web-building spiders face a significant problem: how to begin courting female spiders without being mistaken for prey? Male Argiope spiders generate distinctive courtship vibrations (shudders) when entering a female's web. We tested whether courtship shudders delay female predatory behaviour, even when live prey is present in the web. We presented a live cricket to females during playbacks of shudder vibrations, or white noise, and compared female responses to a control in which we presented a live cricket with no playback vibrations. Females were much slower to respond to crickets during playback of shudder vibrations. Shudder vibrations also delayed female predatory behaviour in a related spider species, showing that these vibrations do not simply function for species identity. These results suggest that male web-building spiders employ a phylogenetically conserved vibratory signal to ameliorate the risk of pre-copulatory cannibalism.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24356181 PMCID: PMC3867958 DOI: 10.1038/srep03557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Comparison of natural and experimental stimulus waveforms.
(a) Waveform of a vibration generated by an adult male shuddering in a female's web, and (b) waveform of the same shudder in (a) played through an electromagnetic shaker.
Figure 2Female response latency.
Survival analysis showing the percentage of females that responded to the cricket prey over the test period. Each step indicates a female(s) responding to the cricket prey. (a) A. keyserlingi females responding to cricket prey during playback of A. keyserlingi shudders and white noise compared to the silent playback control, and (b) female A. aetherea responding to cricket prey during playback of A. keyserlingi shudders and white noise compared to the silent playback control.