TL;DR: Findings on the sand-dwelling wolf spider, Allocosa brasiliensis, prove a reversal in typical courtship roles reported for the first time in spiders, turning it as a promising model for discussing the determinants of sex roles and the pressures that drive their evolution and maintenance.
Abstract: Sexual selection theory predicts that a higher investment in offspring will turn females into the selective sex, while males will compete for accessing and courting them However, there are exceptions to the rule When males present a high reproductive investment, sex roles can reverse from typical patterns, turning males into the choosy sex, while females locate males and initiate courtship In many spiders, males are smaller than females, wandering in search of sedentary females and maximizing the number of copulations In the present study, we present findings on the sand-dwelling wolf spider, Allocosa brasiliensis, evidencing a reversal in typical courtship roles reported for the first time in spiders Males were bigger than females Females located males and initiated courtship Copulation always occurred in male burrows and took place mainly in long burrows Males donated their burrows to the females after copulation, closing the entrance before leaving with female cooperation from inside Males would provide females with a secure place for ovipositing, being exposed to predation and diminishing their future mating possibilities until constructing a new burrow The cost of vacating the burrow and losing the refuge in an unpredictable habitat, such as sand dunes, would explain the courtship roles reversal in this spider species Results turn A brasiliensis as a promising model for discussing the determinants of sex roles and the pressures that drive their evolution and maintenance
TL;DR: Data is compared on development and morphology and reproductive isolation between morphs of A. brasiliensis to test the hypotheses that the two morphs are reproductively isolated and both show courtship-role reversal.
Abstract: Allocosa brasiliensis (Petrunkevitch, 1910) is a nocturnal wolf spider inhabitant of coastal dunes. Pitfall-trap data suggested the occurrence of two sympatric and synchronic morphs, with differences in adult size and abdominal design (minor and major morphs). Previous studies performed with the major morph of A. brasiliensis, postulated courtship-role and sexual size dimorphism reversal for this spider. In the present study, we compare data on development and morphology and test reproductive isolation between morphs of A. brasiliensis, with the hypotheses that the two morphs are reproductively isolated and both show courtship-role reversal. As had been reported for the major morph of A. brasiliensis, the minor-morph females approached the burrows of minor-morph males, entered, initiated courtship, and after copulation, males closed their burrows with female cooperation from the inside. Females did not court or copulate with males belonging to the other morph and, in two cases, major-morph females canniba...
TL;DR: The establishment of the Mediterranean-like climate and the Pleistocenic glacial cycles seem to have been the main factors that promoted the diversification within the wolf spider genus Lycosa Latreille, and the hypothesis of a relatively recent evolutionary origin of diversification of the group is supported.
TL;DR: The occurrence of differences in morphological traits related to sex roles in both Allocosa species and the results with two non-burrowing wolf spiders with typical sex roles are explored.
Abstract: Allocosa alticeps and Allocosa brasiliensis are two sex-role-reversed spiders. Females locate males and initiate courtship. Copulation occurs inside male burrows and after copulation the males deliver their burrows to the females. We explored the occurrence of differences in morphological traits related to sex roles in both Allocosa species and compared the results with two non-burrowing wolf spiders with typical sex roles. We measured the length of the foreleg's tibia-patella and the chelicerae. Scanning electron micrographs of palpal tarsus distal sections were taken. Males showed higher values than females in all the traits considered. Adult and penultimate males lacked true claws compared with juveniles and females, but showed modified spines. The palpal organ was more proximal to the tibia compared with the non-burrowing lycosids considered in this study. Spines and palpal organ location could be associated with more effective digging. We discuss how natural and sexual selection could interact on mor...