Z1-4194 — Final report
1.
Peculiar reproductive strategies

We presented our research on sexual behaviour of spiders exhibiting unusual sexual strategies, such as mate binding, genital plugging, emasculation, sexual cannibalism, opportunistic mating, traumatic insemination, etc.

F.35 Other

COBISS.SI-ID: 35478317
2.
Remote copulation in spiders

In interview I explained to general public our studies of sexual behaviour in spider Nephilengys malabarensis (refs: Kral jFišer et al. 2011: Eunuchs are better fighters; Lee et al. 2012: Emasculation : glovesoff strategy enhances eunuch spider endurance; Li et al. 2012: Remote copulation).

B.06 Other

COBISS.SI-ID: 35478573
3.
Which spiders can dwell in urban environment?

I presented the conclusions from my post-doctoral project. Spiders dwelling in cities have relatively faster generation turn-over and higher reproductive success, and exhibit higher developmental plasticity; they are relatively bolder and more active in novel environment; probably they also show higher intra-species tolerance. The latter needs to be further studied.

B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference

COBISS.SI-ID: 36883501
4.
Challenging the aggressive spillover hypothesis

Sexual cannibalism is a rare phenomenon in animal world, but common in several spider species. It has been explained by many hypotheses, e.g. female hunger and mate choice. Pre­copulatory cannibalism, where virgin females devour males before mating, is more puzzling to explain, because it may bring no benefit to either sex. In his seminal paper, Goran Arnqvist (1997) proposed that pre­copulatory cannibalism represents a spillover of female aggressiveness from the juvenile foraging context, when aggressiveness is advantageous, to the adult mating context, when aggressiveness may be non­adaptive or mal­ adaptive; this is so­called “aggressive­spillover hypothesis=ASH”. In other words, individuals exhibit limited plasticity in aggressive behaviours because they are genetically canalized for indiscriminate aggressiveness towards prey and conspecifics, including males. Hence, a tendency to employ pre­copulatory cannibalism is supposed to be a part of the female aggression syndrome, an assertion generally accepted in the personality field. We found serious caveats in ASH and therefore re­ evaluated findings reporting support for ASH. While the ASH explains pre­copulatory cannibalism solely based on female aggressiveness, we conclude that other factors may work in concert with personality, such as female hunger level, mate size dimorphism, mate behaviour and quality. Cannibalistic females have never been found to experience curtailed fitness as predicted by ASH. We warned to consider ASH more critically and propose further directions. The review was published in Ethology and already received two answers both agreeing and explaining their view where differ

B.04 Guest lecture

COBISS.SI-ID: 36269613