Poy Dante, Piacentini Luis N, Lin Shou-Wang, Martínez Leonel A, Ramírez Martín J, Michalik Peter
Division of Arachnology Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales - CONICET Buenos Aires Argentina.
Zoologisches Institut und Museum Universität Greifswald Greifswald Germany.
Ecol Evol. 2023 Oct 3;13(10):e10582. doi: 10.1002/ece3.10582. eCollection 2023 Oct.
Spiders evolved a distinctive sperm transfer system, with the male copulatory organs located on the tarsus of the pedipalps. In entelegyne spiders, these organs are usually very complex and consist of various sclerites that not only allow the transfer of the sperm themselves but also provide a mechanical interlock between the male and female genitalia. This interlocking can also involve elements that are not part of the copulatory organ such as the retrolateral tibial apophysis (RTA)-a characteristic of the most diverse group of spiders (RTA clade). The RTA is frequently used for primary locking i.e., the first mechanical engagement between male and female genitalia. Despite its functional importance, some diverse spider lineages have lost the RTA, but evolved an apophysis on the femur instead. It can be hypothesized that this femoral apophysis is a functional surrogate of the RTA during primary locking or possibly serves another function, such as self-bracing, which involves mechanical interaction between male genital structures themselves to stabilize the inserted pedipalp. We tested these hypotheses using ghost spiders of the genus (Anyphaenidae). Our micro-computed tomography data of cryofixed mating pairs show that the primary locking occurs through elements of the copulatory organ itself and that the femoral apophysis does not contact the female genitalia, but hooks to a projection of the copulatory bulb, representing a newly documented self-bracing mechanism for entelegyne spiders. Additionally, we show that the femoral self-bracing apophysis is rather uniform within the genus This is in contrast to the male genital structures that interact with the female, indicating that the male genital structures of are subject to different selective regimes.
蜘蛛进化出了独特的精子传递系统,雄性交配器官位于须肢的跗节上。在 entelegyne 蜘蛛中,这些器官通常非常复杂,由各种骨片组成,这些骨片不仅能实现精子的传递,还能在雄性和雌性生殖器之间提供机械互锁。这种互锁还可能涉及一些并非交配器官一部分的结构,比如后侧胫突(RTA)——这是最多样化的蜘蛛类群(RTA 分支)的一个特征。RTA 经常用于初次锁定,即雄性和雌性生殖器之间的首次机械结合。尽管其功能很重要,但一些不同的蜘蛛谱系已经失去了 RTA,而是在股骨上进化出了一个突起。可以推测,这个股骨突起在初次锁定时是 RTA 的功能替代物,或者可能具有其他功能,比如自我支撑,这涉及雄性生殖器结构之间的机械相互作用以稳定插入的须肢。我们使用 属(Anyphaenidae)的幽灵蜘蛛对这些假设进行了测试。我们对低温固定的交配配对的显微计算机断层扫描数据表明,初次锁定是通过交配器官本身的结构实现的,并且股骨突起不与雌性生殖器接触,而是钩住交配球的一个突起,这代表了一种新记录的 entelegyne 蜘蛛的自我支撑机制。此外,我们表明股骨自我支撑突起在 属内相当一致。这与与雌性相互作用的雄性生殖器结构形成对比,表明 属的雄性生殖器结构受到不同的选择机制影响。