为爱风雨兼程:悉尼漏斗网蜘蛛(Atrax robustus)野生雄性的求偶行为

Caitlin Nicole Creak, Hugo Muirhead, Russell Bonduriansky, Michael Kasumovic, Bruno Buzatto
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摘要

寻找配偶是一件充满风险的事情,这往往会使主动寻找配偶的性别面临威胁和快速变化的条件。然而,对无脊椎动物主动寻找配偶行为的研究很少,我们对寻找配偶策略如何进化以应对恶劣天气带来的风险的了解也很有限。我们研究了悉尼漏斗网蜘蛛(Atrax robustus)这种世界上最毒的蜘蛛之一如何在其栖息地中移动寻找配偶的雄性,以及它们的移动如何受到天气条件的影响。雌蛛是功能性无尾蜘蛛,一生都生活在一个洞穴中,而雄蛛则必须在繁殖季节永久性地离开洞穴去交配。在澳大利亚悉尼莱恩科夫国家公园,19只雄蜘蛛安装了微型无线电发射器,并在2020年(2只)、2021年(8只)和2022年(9只)的交配季节对其进行了追踪。雄性在夜间移动,通常呈 "之 "字形移动,每天约有 50%的重见时间在新地点被发现。雄鸟经常在雌鸟的洞穴里待上几天,有些雌鸟的洞穴会被多只雄鸟光顾。雄性在雌性洞穴外建造并占据临时住所("temporacula")。在无雨和凉爽后的温暖夜晚,雄性最有可能移动和/或移动得最远。我们的研究结果表明,寻找配偶的雄性健壮蛙更喜欢在风险较小的条件下寻找雌性,这揭示了新的风险最小化策略,尤其是对降雨和温度的反应。
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Weathering the storm for love: Mate searching behaviour of wild males of the Sydney funnel-web spider (Atrax robustus)
The risky business of mate-searching often leaves the actively searching sex facing threats and rapidly changing conditions. Yet, active mate-searching behaviour is rarely studied in invertebrates, and we have limited understanding of how mate-searching strategies have evolved to cope with risks posed by harsh weather. We investigated how mate-searching males move through their habitat and how their movement is affected by weather conditions in the Sydney funnel-web spider (Atrax robustus), one of the world's most venomous spiders. As is common in mygalomorphs spiders, females are functionally sessile, and are thought to spend their whole lives in a single burrow, whereas males must permanently abandon their burrows to mate during the breeding season. Nineteen male spiders were fitted with micro-radio transmitters and tracked during their mating seasons in 2020 (n = 2), 2021 (n = 8) and 2022 (n = 9) in Lane Cove National Park, in Sydney, Australia. Males moved at night, typically in a zig-zag pattern, and were found in new locations on approximately 50% of daily resighting's. Males often spent several days in a female's burrow, and some female burrows were visited by multiple males. When outside a female's burrow, males constructed and occupied temporary shelters ('temporacula'). Males were most likely to move and/or moved furthest when there was no rain, and on warm nights after cool days. Our findings suggest that mate-searching A. robustus males prefer to search for females in less risky conditions, revealing novel risk-minimizing strategies, especially in response to rainfall and temperature.
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