Nephila spider male aggregation: preference for optimal female size and web clustering

Author:

KUNTNER Matjaž1234ORCID,KUNTNER Maj5,KUNTNER Eva5,KUNTNER Irena5,FAGANELI PUCER Jana6ORCID,ŠTRUMBELJ Erik6ORCID,LI Daiqin37ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Organisms and Ecosystems Research National Institute of Biology Ljubljana Slovenia

2. Jovan Hadži Institute of Biology Research Centre of the Slovenian Sciences and Arts Ljubljana Slovenia

3. State Key Laboratory of Biocatalysis and Enzyme Engineering & Centre for Behavioural Ecology & Evolution, School of Life Sciences Hubei University Wuhan Hubei China

4. Department of Entomology, National Museum of Natural History Smithsonian Institution Washington DC USA

5. Spodnje Prapreče Lukovica Slovenia

6. Faculty of Computer and Information Science University of Ljubljana Ljubljana Slovenia

7. Department of Biological Sciences National University of Singapore Singapore Singapore

Abstract

AbstractSexual size dimorphism theory predicts biased operational sex ratios (OSRs) and an uneven distribution of males among certain females. We studied this phenomenon through a field census of the giant wood spider Nephila pilipes (family Nephilidae) in Singapore, a species where females are, on average, 6.9 times larger than males. Specifically, we tested two hypotheses concerning male distribution, given their tendency to aggregate in certain female webs. The optimal female size hypothesis predicts that males would predominantly occupy webs of intermediate‐sized females. The web clustering hypothesis posits that more males would be found in webs closer together compared to those farther apart. Our snapshot census revealed a female‐biased OSR (females: males = 1.85) with an uneven distribution of males in female webs. Most males were found in webs of intermediate‐sized females aligning with the optimal female size hypothesis. Proximity among female webs was indicative of male presence, lending support to the web clustering hypothesis. While our study's limited sample size warrants caution, we conclude that in N. pilipes, male occupation of female webs is facilitated by the clustering of webs, and males prefer to cohabit with optimally sized, receptive females.

Publisher

Wiley

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