Female Spiders Eat Small Males When They Mate

hermanntrude

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jun 23, 2006
7,267
118
63
45
Newfoundland!
ScienceDaily (Sep. 11, 2008) — Female spiders are voracious predators and consume a wide range of prey, which sometimes includes their mates. A number of hypotheses have been proposed for why females eat males before or after mating.


A female wolf spider, Hogna helluo, consuming a male.

Researchers Shawn Wilder and Ann Rypstra from Miami University in Ohio found that the answer may be simpler than previously thought.

Males are more likely to be eaten if they are much smaller than females, which likely affects how easy they are to catch. In one species of spider, Hogna helluo, large males were never consumed while small males were consumed 80% of the time. This result was also confirmed when Wilder and Rypstra examined published data from a wide range of spider species. Males are more likely to be eaten in species where males are small relative to females.

Much research on sexual cannibalism has focused on a few extreme cases involving sexual selection and sperm competition. However, by looking at data on a wide range of spiders, Wilder and Rypstra discovered that the size of the male relative to the female (often referred to as sexual size dimorphism) determines how often sexual cannibalism occurs in a species.

"We were surprised to find that such a simple characteristic such as how small males are relative to females has such a large effect on the frequency of sexual cannibalism," states Shawn Wilder. In many cases, sexual cannibalism may not be a complex balancing act of costs and benefits for males and females but rather a case of a hungry female eating a male when he is small enough to catch.

In an interesting twist, evolution does not appear to be driving this relationship. For example, females would not become larger to consume more males because each male would then be a smaller meal to the larger female and males would not become smaller to be eaten more often because they would not get to mate as often.

Rather, sexual cannibalism may be a byproduct of the evolution of large females and small males in a predatory species.

source
 

karrie

OogedyBoogedy
Jan 6, 2007
27,780
285
83
bliss
In an interesting twist, evolution does not appear to be driving this relationship. For example, females would not become larger to consume more males because each male would then be a smaller meal to the larger female and males would not become smaller to be eaten more often because they would not get to mate as often.

They fail to address why, given the nature of evolution, the males don't get larger to help ensure they get more opportunities to mate. They also don't address what sort of evolutionary gain the males may get from staying small and allowing themselves to be eaten, such as, perhaps, better ensured fertilization in the event that the female may not have been able to find enough food.
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
41,035
201
63
RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
They fail to address why, given the nature of evolution, the males don't get larger to help ensure they get more opportunities to mate. They also don't address what sort of evolutionary gain the males may get from staying small and allowing themselves to be eaten, such as, perhaps, better ensured fertilization in the event that the female may not have been able to find enough food.

Yes it could be as you say or it could be that we are witnessing the natural selfless sacrifice that males normally afford females, even when it will likely kill them.
 

hermanntrude

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Jun 23, 2006
7,267
118
63
45
Newfoundland!
They fail to address why, given the nature of evolution, the males don't get larger to help ensure they get more opportunities to mate. They also don't address what sort of evolutionary gain the males may get from staying small and allowing themselves to be eaten, such as, perhaps, better ensured fertilization in the event that the female may not have been able to find enough food.

perhaps it's easier to be a small male and survive, until you meet your dream-girl, so then the only males who get to mate are small, despite the fact they might eaten too
 

EagleSmack

Hall of Fame Member
Feb 16, 2005
44,168
95
48
USA
The male has also done his job and has ensured that his genes will be passed along. What else is there left for a spider. Plus it ensures that his death nourishes the female. I saw a documentary of a black widow after mating. The male got away and then came back on her web. He basically rolled on his back and waited for her to eat him...she finally obliged.