The evolutionary significance of widespread hypo-allometric scaling of genital traits in combination with rapid interspecific genital trait divergence has been of key interest to evolutionary biologists for many years and remains poorly understood. Here, we provide a detailed assessment of quantitative genital trait variation in males and females of the sexually highly dimorphic and cannibalistic orb-weaving spider Argiope aurantia. We then test how this trait variation relates to sperm transfer success. In particular, we test specific predictions of the one-size-fits-all and lock-and-key hypotheses for the evolution of genital characters. We use video-taped staged matings in a controlled environment with subsequent morphological microdisse...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
The evolutionary significance of widespread hypo-allometric scaling of genital traits in combination...
Background: In most animal groups, it is unclear how body size variation relates to genital size dif...
Sexual dimorphism describes substantial differences between male and female phenotypes. In spiders, ...
Extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is relatively rare in animal species. Males are much smaller th...
In a study of the spider Pholcus phalangioides, we double-mated large or small females with large an...
Extreme sexual body size dimorphism (SSD), in which males are only a small fraction of the size of t...
Male-biased size dimorphism is usually expected to evolve in taxa with intense male-male competition...
Sperm competition drives traits that enhance fertilization success. The amount of sperm transferred ...
Once thought to be energetically cheap and easy to produce, empirical work has shown that sperm is a...
Most hypotheses related to the evolution of female-biased extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) attri...
Abstract.—Extreme sexual body size dimorphism (SSD), in which males are only a small fraction of the...
Copulatory cannibalism of male 'widow' spiders (genus Latrodectus) is a model example of the extreme...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
The evolutionary significance of widespread hypo-allometric scaling of genital traits in combination...
Background: In most animal groups, it is unclear how body size variation relates to genital size dif...
Sexual dimorphism describes substantial differences between male and female phenotypes. In spiders, ...
Extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) is relatively rare in animal species. Males are much smaller th...
In a study of the spider Pholcus phalangioides, we double-mated large or small females with large an...
Extreme sexual body size dimorphism (SSD), in which males are only a small fraction of the size of t...
Male-biased size dimorphism is usually expected to evolve in taxa with intense male-male competition...
Sperm competition drives traits that enhance fertilization success. The amount of sperm transferred ...
Once thought to be energetically cheap and easy to produce, empirical work has shown that sperm is a...
Most hypotheses related to the evolution of female-biased extreme sexual size dimorphism (SSD) attri...
Abstract.—Extreme sexual body size dimorphism (SSD), in which males are only a small fraction of the...
Copulatory cannibalism of male 'widow' spiders (genus Latrodectus) is a model example of the extreme...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...
The expected strong directional selection for traits that increase a male's mating ability conflicts...
Animal species’ body sizes result from the balance between selection for survival and selection for ...