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To mate or to steal food? A male spider’s dilemma

We report a sequence of unusual male behaviors observed in the spider species Nephila pilipes (family Nephilidae), a sexually size dimorphic tropical spider species in Singapore. We documented a male suitor using his mouth parts (chelicerae) rather than his copulatory organs (pedipalps) to repeatedly probe female genitals. The behaviors may have served as a strategy to assess the female’s mating status, functioned as a courtship strategy, or, most plausibly, represented an attempt to remove a genital plug.


The documented chrono-sequence culminated in the male’s attempted commensalism, followed by an aggressive attack by the female, resulting in near-fatal injury to the male. Notably, the attack did not escalate into cannibalism, suggesting that the extreme size difference in Nephila may render small males unappealing as prey.



 
 
 

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National Institute of Biology

Večna pot 111, Ljubljana, Slovenia

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Jovan Hadži Institute of Biology ZRC SAZU

Novi trg 2, Ljubljana, Slovenia (seat)

- Zagorica 20, Ig, Slovenia (loc. 1)

- Moša Pijade 22, Maribor, Slovenia (loc. 2)

eazylab@gmail.com

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