Juvenile leg autotomy predicts adult male morph in a New Zealand harvestman with weapon polymorphism

Author:

Powell Erin C1ORCID,Painting Christina J2ORCID,Machado Glauco3ORCID,Holwell Gregory I1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Te Kura Mātauranga Koiora/School of Biological Sciences, University of Auckland , 3a Symonds St, Auckland 1010 , New Zealand

2. Te Aka Mātuatua School of Science, University of Waikato , Gate 8, Hillcrest Road, Hamilton 3240 , New Zealand

3. LAGE do Departamento de Ecologia, Instituto de Biociências, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Matão, Travessa 14, no. 101, Cidade Universitária , São Paulo CEP 05.508-090 , Brazil

Abstract

AbstractIntraspecific weapon polymorphisms that arise via conditional thresholds may be affected by juvenile experience such as predator encounters, yet this idea has rarely been tested. The New Zealand harvestman Forsteropsalis pureora has three male morphs: majors (alphas and betas) are large-bodied with large chelicerae used in male–male contests, while minors (gammas) are small-bodied with small chelicerae and scramble to find mates. Individuals use leg autotomy to escape predators and there is no regeneration of the missing leg. Here, we tested whether juvenile experience affects adult morph using leg autotomy scars as a proxy of predator encounters. Juvenile males that lost at least one leg (with either locomotory or sensory function) had a 45 times higher probability of becoming a minor morph at adulthood than intact juvenile males. Leg loss during development may affect foraging, locomotion, and/or physiology, potentially linking a juvenile’s predator encounters to their final adult morph and future reproductive tactic.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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