Sexual cannibalism as a female resistance trait: a new hypothesis

Author:

Burke Nathan W1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, Institute of Cell and Systems Biology of Animals, Universität Hamburg , Hamburg , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Female spiders and praying mantises are renowned for their cannibalism of male partners before, during, or after mating. While several hypotheses have been proposed to explain species-specific examples of sexual cannibalism, much variation remains unexplained, including why the timing of cannibalism varies across taxa. Here, I outline how sexually cannibalistic behavior could evolve via sexually antagonistic selection as a type of behavioral resistance to male-imposed mating costs, and how such a generalizable interpretation provides a framework for understanding the evolution of both sexual cannibalism in females and anti-cannibalistic traits in males. I discuss how differences between mating systems that physiologically constrain males to mate only once (monogyny) or twice (bigyny) and systems where the sexes can potentially mate multiply (polygyny and polyandry) are likely to influence how sexual conflict shapes cannibalistic behavior. I review key examples from the literature that suggest how sexually cannibalistic behavior might function as a female resistance trait and provide comprehensive predictions for testing this hypothesis empirically.

Funder

Alexander Family Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference96 articles.

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2. Sexual selection, ecology, and evolution of nuptial gifts in spiders;Albo,2014

3. Benefits of size dimorphism and copulatory silk wrapping in the sexually cannibalistic nursery web spider, Pisaurina mira;Anderson,2016

4. Sexual selection for male sacrifice in the Australian redback spider;Andrade,1996

5. Female hunger can explain variation in cannibalistic behavior despite male sacrifice in redback spiders;Andrade,1998

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