• Title of article

    Costs increase as ritualized fighting progresses within and between phases in the sierra dome spider, Neriene litigiosa

  • Author/Authors

    deCarvalho، Tagide N. نويسنده , , Watson، Paul J. نويسنده , , Field، Scott A. نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    -472
  • From page
    473
  • To page
    0
  • Abstract
    Magnitudes and patterns of energy expenditure in animal contests are seldom measured, but can be critical for predicting contest dynamics and understanding the evolution of ritualized fighting behaviour. In the sierra dome spider, males compete for sexual access to females and their webs. They show three distinct phases of fighting behaviour, escalating from ritualized noncontact display (phase 1) to cooperative wrestling (phase 2), and finally to unritualized, potentially fatal fighting (phase 3). Using CO2 respirometry, we estimated energetic costs of male-male combat in terms of mean and maximum metabolic rates and the rate of increase in energy expenditure. We also investigated the energetic consequences of age and body mass, and compared fighting metabolism to metabolism during courtship. All three phases involved mean energy expenditures well above resting metabolic rate (3.5×, 7.4× and 11.5×). Both mean and maximum energy expenditure became substantially greater as fights escalated through successive phases. The rates of increase in energy use during phases 2 and 3 were much higher than in phase 1. In addition, age and body mass affected contest energetics. These results are consistent with a basic prediction of evolutionarily stable strategy contest models, that sequences of agonistic behaviours should be organized into phases of escalating energetic costs. Finally, higher energetic costs of escalated fighting compared to courtship provide a rationale for first-male sperm precedence in this spider species.
  • Keywords
    pyrrolopyridine , regioselective halogenation of 6-azaindoles , copper (II) bromide
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    Animal Behaviour
  • Record number

    112089