Institute of Biology, Scientific Research Centre, Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
PLoS One. 2012;7(7):e40939. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0040939. Epub 2012 Jul 19.
Males usually produce mating plugs to reduce sperm competition. However, females can conceivably also produce mating plugs in order to prevent unwanted, superfluous and energetically costly matings. In spiders-appropriate models for testing plugging biology hypotheses-mating plugs may consist of male genital parts and/or of amorphous covers consisting of glandular or sperm secretions. In the giant wood spider Nephila pilipes, a highly sexually dimorphic and polygamous species, males are known to produce ineffective embolic plugs through genital damage, but nothing is known about the origin and function of additional conspicuous amorphous plugs (AP) covering female genitals.
We tested alternative hypotheses of the nature and function of AP in N. pilipes by staging mating trials with varying degrees of polyandry. No APs were ever formed during mating trials, which rules out the possibility of male AP formation. Instead, those females that oviposited produced the AP from a liquid secreted during egg sac formation. Polyandrous females were more likely to lay eggs and to produce the AP, as were those that mated longer and with more total insertions. Our further tests revealed that, in spite of being a side product of egg sac production, AP, when hardened, prevented any subsequent copulation.
We conclude that in the giant wood spider (Nephila pilipes), the amorphous mating plugs are not produced by the males, that repeated copulations (most likely polyandrous) are necessary for egg fertilization and AP formation, and that the AP represents a female adaptation to sexual conflict through prevention of unwanted, excessive copulations. Considering the largely unknown origin of amorphous plugs in spiders, we predict that a similar pattern might be detected in other clades, which would help elucidate the evolutionary interplay of various selection pressures responsible for the origin and maintenance of mating plugs.
雄性通常会产生交配栓以减少精子竞争。然而,雌性也可以想象地产生交配栓,以防止不必要的、多余的和能量成本高昂的交配。在蜘蛛中——适合测试堵塞生物学假设的模型——交配栓可能由雄性生殖器部分和/或由由腺体或精子分泌物组成的无定形覆盖物组成。在高度性二态和多配偶的巨型木蜘蛛 Nephila pilipes 中,已知雄性通过生殖器损伤产生无效栓塞栓,但对于覆盖雌性生殖器的额外明显无定形栓(AP)的起源和功能一无所知。
我们通过进行不同程度的多配偶交配试验来测试 N. pilipes 中 AP 的性质和功能的替代假设。在交配试验中从未形成过 AP,这排除了雄性 AP 形成的可能性。相反,那些产卵的雌性会从卵囊形成过程中分泌的液体中产生 AP。多配偶的雌性更有可能产卵并产生 AP,那些交配时间更长且总插入次数更多的雌性也是如此。我们的进一步测试表明,尽管 AP 是卵囊产生的副产品,但硬化后,AP 会阻止任何后续的交配。
我们得出的结论是,在巨型木蜘蛛(Nephila pilipes)中,无定形交配栓不是由雄性产生的,多次交配(很可能是多配偶)是卵受精和 AP 形成所必需的,AP 代表了雌性通过防止不必要的、过度的交配来适应性冲突的一种适应。考虑到蜘蛛中无定形栓的起源在很大程度上未知,我们预测在其他进化枝中可能会发现类似的模式,这将有助于阐明导致交配栓起源和维持的各种选择压力的进化相互作用。