| Literature DB >> 26542456 |
Christina J Painting1, Anna F Probert1, Daniel J Townsend1, Gregory I Holwell1.
Abstract
Alternative reproductive tactics in animals are commonly associated with distinct male phenotypes resulting in polymorphism of sexually selected weapons such as horns and spines. Typically, morphs are divided between small (unarmed) and large (armed) males according to one or more developmental thresholds in association with body size. Here, we describe remarkable weapon trimorphism within a single species, where two exaggerated weapon morphs and a third morph with reduced weaponry are present. Male Pantopsalis cheliferoides harvestmen display exaggerated chelicerae (jaws) which are highly variable in length among individuals. Across the same body size spectrum, however, some males belong to a distinct second exaggerated morph which possesses short, broad chelicerae. Multiple weapon morphs in a single species is a previously unknown phenomenon and our findings have significant implications for understanding weapon diversity and maintenance of polymorphism. Specifically, this species will be a valuable model for testing how weapons diverge by being able to test directly for the circumstances under which a certain weapon type is favoured and how weapon shape relates to performance.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26542456 PMCID: PMC4635406 DOI: 10.1038/srep16368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Measurements of weapon (chelicera) and body (prosoma) size of male Pantopsalis cheliferoides.
| Range (mm) | Mean (standard deviation) | CV% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chelicera length (mm) | 3.11–15.58 | 10.64 (3.44) | 32.37 |
| Chelicera width (mm) | 0.58–1.79 | 1.12 (0.28) | 25.49 |
| Prosoma width (mm) | 2.21–3.38 | 3.18 (0.38) | 11.97 |
Figure 1Weapon polymorphism in Pantopsalis cheliferoides.
Males were assigned to three weapon morphs: (a) long-slender, (b) short-broad, or (c) a short-slender. (d) Chelicera length showed dimorphism. (e) The scaling relationship between chelicera length and body size revealed two morphs (open circles <95% confidence of morph assignment): a long-slender morph (alpha, green dots, black line) and a short-broad morph (beta, purple dots, dashed line). However, when these data are plotted against chelicera width (f), the beta (purple) morph is split into two groups, suggesting that one measurement of chelicera size does not adequately capture the variation in this trait. (g) Chelicera width showed trimorphism with three skew-normal distributions, revealing a third, short-slender morph (gamma, blue dots, dotted line) that previously was grouped with the short-broad morph (h). (i) These three morphs plotted on to a scaling relationship of chelicera length demonstrates a split between long-slender (alpha, green dots), short-broad (beta, purple dots) and short-slender (gamma, blue dots) males.
Scaling relationships (slopes and intercepts ± 95% confidence intervals) between chelicera size and prosoma width for male Pantopsalis cheliferoides using standard major axis regression.
| Morph | n | Slope | Intercept | Upper CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimate | Lower CI | Upper CI | Estimate | Lower CI | |||
| 78 | |||||||
| alpha (green) | 45 | 3.87 | 2.96 | 5.06 | 0.46 | −3.59 | 3.55 |
| beta (purple) | 33 | 3.15 | 2.26 | 4.39 | −2.79 | −6.45 | −0.17 |
| 65 | |||||||
| alpha (green) | 40 | 0.25 | 0.18 | 0.34 | 0.28 | −0.02 | 0.34 |
| beta (purple) | 15 | 0.33 | 0.20 | 0.54 | 0.47 | −0.24 | 0.91 |
| gamma (blue) | 10 | 0.29 | 0.14 | 0.61 | −0.08 | −0.88 | 0.30 |
The colours in parentheses refer to those used in Fig. 1.
Detection of male dimorphism and trimorphism in chelicerae size of Pantopsalis cheliferoides.
| Chelicera length | Chelicera width | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AIC | ΔAIC | AIC | ΔAIC | |
| 1 distribution | 459.49 | 20.5 | 33.06 | 3.09 |
| 2 distributions | 34.84 | 4.87 | ||
| 3 distributions | 443.01 | 4.02 | ||
Note: The best model is highlighted in bold. ΔAIC is compared to the best model.
Figure 2Aggressive interactions between male Pantopsalis cheliferoides.
(a) Interactions between both exaggerated morphs (long-slender and short-broad) are initiated when one male approaches another and touches the opponent with its first and second legs. (b) Long-slender males face their opponent, unfold their chelicera so that the second segments are held at right angles to the first, and then rapidly wave their chelicerae in unison, occasionally jabbing towards their opponent. (c) In escalated contests males proceed to grappling before one male retreats. (d) Rather than completely unfolding their chelicerae, a short-broad male (right) approaches a long-slender male (left), unfolds the second segment to a 45 ° angle and moves his chelicerae up and down in a stabbing movement, also jabbing at his opponent in an attempt to pinch onto their chelicerae.