| Literature DB >> 28564054 |
Olof Leimar1, Steven Austad2, Magnus Enquist1.
Abstract
Male bowl and doily spiders (Frontinella pyramitela: Linyphiidae) engage in dangerous fights over access to females. Relatively smaller individuals are more at risk of fatal injury than their larger opponents. Males assess relative fighting ability during contests: smaller individuals tend to give up quickly. Fights occur between a male with information about the value of the contested female (number of fertilizable eggs) and an intruding male with less information. In this paper, a sequential assessment game (a game theory model of fighting behavior) is adapted to male combat in the bowl and doily spider to attempt a quantitative test. The model makes predictions about fight duration, probability of winning, and the occurrence of fatalities as a function of resource value and size asymmetry. Comparison with empirical data from staged contests yields a generally good quantitative agreement with the predictions. A few deviations are also noted. © 1991 The Society for the Study of Evolution.Entities:
Keywords: Fighting behavior; Frontinella pyramitela; sequential assessment game, spiders
Year: 1991 PMID: 28564054 DOI: 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1991.tb04355.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evolution ISSN: 0014-3820 Impact factor: 3.694