Simon Connolly has watched around 1100 hours of footage of male spiders being placed into plastic containers with females inside. Sometimes they mate. Sometimes they get eaten. But that’s just how it goes. Spider sex can be a risky business.
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Simon is part of the invertebrate behavioural ecology lab at the University of Waikato, where he is working towards a PhD. His supervisor, Dr Chrissie Painting, is interested in the big questions around how and why different mating systems evolve.
Chrissie is figuring out what prerequisites you need for a mating system called monogyny to evolve. Monogyny is when males mate with just one female – a set up that bucks the ‘classic’ sexual selection theory that says that males of a species will generally tend to try to mate with as many females as possible to ensure the continuation of their genes.
When you get monogyny in different animals you tend to see particular sets of traits, such as females that are a lot larger than their male counterparts. You also sometimes see particularly weird behaviours around mating time, including sexual cannibalism, where the female might eat the male after mating.
To identify the evolutionary steps that might lead a creature down the monogyny mating system route, Chrissie is focusing on a group of spiders that seem to show remarkable variation in the mating systems they employ.
By studying the four Dolomedes fishing spiders that live in Aotearoa New Zealand, and adding this to findings from her collaborators overseas about other Dolomedes spiders, she hopes to unravel the web of traits and circumstances that leads to evolution of monogyny.
Listen to the episode to join Claire Concannon, Chrissie and Simon on a spider hunt in Kirikiriroa Hamilton, to find out about this remarkable group of spiders (some of whom can fish!), and hear how Chrissie hopes this research will add to our understanding of life on earth.
Research into the evolution of mating systems in Dolomedes spiders is supported by a 2022 Marsden Fast-Start Grant awarded to Dr Painting. The project is in collaboration with researchers at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the National Institute of Biology in Slovenia and with Dr O’Neale at the University of Auckland.
To learn more:
- Chrissie spoke to Alison Ballance in 2012 about her PhD research on giraffe weevils
- Our Changing World has covered many native insects and spiders across the years! Find out more about the Helm’s Stag Beetle, the Cromwell chafer beetle, wētāpunga, cicadas, dragonflies and stick insects.
- You can also listen to Rangatira night shift, in which Alison Ballance spent the night on Rangatira getting to know the inhabitants, including the Rangatira spider.
- The shady fishing spider and the Rangatira spider have also featured on Critter of the Week.