Female redback spiders cannibalise mating males. New research has shown they have evolved two separate sperm storage organs, allowing them to make post-copulatory paternity choices. Counter-adaptation by males, to maximise paternity after cannibalism, has led to the evolution of an abdominal constricting mechanism, which enhances short-term survival and mating success after attack by the female and maximises the chances of inseminating both sperm storage sites
Female St Andrew’s Cross spiders control copulation duration by timing sexual cannibalism and may th...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of male morphology, life history, physiology, and behaviour ac...
Male animals typically attempt to mate with multiple females in order to increase their reproductive...
Female redback spiders cannibalise mating males. New research has shown they have evolved two separa...
During copulation, male redback spiders (Latrodectus hasselti: Theridiidae) position themselves abov...
Male redback spiders twist their abdomens onto the fangs of their mates during copulation and, if ca...
Male redback spiders twist their abdomens onto the fangs of their mates during copulation and, if ca...
Male Australian redback spiders (Latrodectus hasselti Thorell: Theridiidae) place their abdomens dir...
Copulatory cannibalism of male ‘widow’ spiders (genus Latrodectus) is a model example of the extreme...
In the Australian redback spider, Latrodectus hasselti, males typically use their paired copulatory ...
Once thought to be energetically cheap and easy to produce, empirical work has shown that sperm is a...
Male dark fishing spiders ( Dolomedes tenebrosus Araneae, Pisauridae) always die during their first ...
Males and females share the same goal in sexual reproduction—increased offspring production and viab...
<div><p>The abundance of sperm relative to eggs selects for males that maximize their number of mate...
Sexual cannibalism is often set apart from other forms of cannibalism; however, no studies have dire...
Female St Andrew’s Cross spiders control copulation duration by timing sexual cannibalism and may th...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of male morphology, life history, physiology, and behaviour ac...
Male animals typically attempt to mate with multiple females in order to increase their reproductive...
Female redback spiders cannibalise mating males. New research has shown they have evolved two separa...
During copulation, male redback spiders (Latrodectus hasselti: Theridiidae) position themselves abov...
Male redback spiders twist their abdomens onto the fangs of their mates during copulation and, if ca...
Male redback spiders twist their abdomens onto the fangs of their mates during copulation and, if ca...
Male Australian redback spiders (Latrodectus hasselti Thorell: Theridiidae) place their abdomens dir...
Copulatory cannibalism of male ‘widow’ spiders (genus Latrodectus) is a model example of the extreme...
In the Australian redback spider, Latrodectus hasselti, males typically use their paired copulatory ...
Once thought to be energetically cheap and easy to produce, empirical work has shown that sperm is a...
Male dark fishing spiders ( Dolomedes tenebrosus Araneae, Pisauridae) always die during their first ...
Males and females share the same goal in sexual reproduction—increased offspring production and viab...
<div><p>The abundance of sperm relative to eggs selects for males that maximize their number of mate...
Sexual cannibalism is often set apart from other forms of cannibalism; however, no studies have dire...
Female St Andrew’s Cross spiders control copulation duration by timing sexual cannibalism and may th...
Sexual selection drives the evolution of male morphology, life history, physiology, and behaviour ac...
Male animals typically attempt to mate with multiple females in order to increase their reproductive...