Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Evolutionary perspectives on insect mating
- 2 Sexual selection by cryptic female choice in insects and arachnids
- 3 Natural and sexual selection components of odonate mating patterns
- 4 Sexual selection in resource defense polygyny: lessons from territorial grasshoppers
- 5 Reproductive strategies of the crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae)
- 6 The evolution of edible ‘sperm sacs’ and other forms of courtship feeding in crickets, katydids and their kin (Orthoptera: Ensifera)
- 7 The evolution of mating systems in the Zoraptera: mating variations and sexual conflicts
- 8 The evolution of water strider mating systems: causes and consequences of sexual conflicts
- 9 Multiple mating, sperm competition, and cryptic female choice in the leaf beetles (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
- 10 Firefly mating ecology, selection and evolution
- 11 Modern mating systems in archaic Holometabola: sexuality in neuropterid insects
- 12 Mating systems of parasitoid wasps
- 13 Fig–associated wasps: pollinators and parasites, sex–ratio adjustment and male polymorphism, population structure and its consequences
- 14 Evolution of mate–signaling in moths: phylogenetic considerations and predictions from the asymmetric tracking hypothesis
- 15 Sexual dimorphism, mating systems and ecology in butterflies
- 16 Lek behavior of insects
- 17 Mate choice and species isolation in swarming insects
- 18 Function and evolution of antlers and eye stalks in flies
- 19 Sex via the substrate: mating systems and sexual selection in pseudoscorpions
- 20 Jumping spider mating strategies: sex among cannibals in and out of webs
- 21 Sexual conflict and the evolution of mating systems
- Organism index
- Subject index
19 - Sex via the substrate: mating systems and sexual selection in pseudoscorpions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Evolutionary perspectives on insect mating
- 2 Sexual selection by cryptic female choice in insects and arachnids
- 3 Natural and sexual selection components of odonate mating patterns
- 4 Sexual selection in resource defense polygyny: lessons from territorial grasshoppers
- 5 Reproductive strategies of the crickets (Orthoptera: Gryllidae)
- 6 The evolution of edible ‘sperm sacs’ and other forms of courtship feeding in crickets, katydids and their kin (Orthoptera: Ensifera)
- 7 The evolution of mating systems in the Zoraptera: mating variations and sexual conflicts
- 8 The evolution of water strider mating systems: causes and consequences of sexual conflicts
- 9 Multiple mating, sperm competition, and cryptic female choice in the leaf beetles (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae)
- 10 Firefly mating ecology, selection and evolution
- 11 Modern mating systems in archaic Holometabola: sexuality in neuropterid insects
- 12 Mating systems of parasitoid wasps
- 13 Fig–associated wasps: pollinators and parasites, sex–ratio adjustment and male polymorphism, population structure and its consequences
- 14 Evolution of mate–signaling in moths: phylogenetic considerations and predictions from the asymmetric tracking hypothesis
- 15 Sexual dimorphism, mating systems and ecology in butterflies
- 16 Lek behavior of insects
- 17 Mate choice and species isolation in swarming insects
- 18 Function and evolution of antlers and eye stalks in flies
- 19 Sex via the substrate: mating systems and sexual selection in pseudoscorpions
- 20 Jumping spider mating strategies: sex among cannibals in and out of webs
- 21 Sexual conflict and the evolution of mating systems
- Organism index
- Subject index
Summary
ABSTRACT
Pseudoscorpions are an ancient order of arachnids whose mating systems display an interesting mix of phylogenetic conservatism and evolutionary plasticity. A 400 millionyear– old pattern of indirect sperm transfer by means of spermatophores deposited on the substrate pervades all aspects of sexual selection in pseudoscorpions. Across families, mating behavior ranges from the ancestral condition, in which males deposit structurally simple spermatophores irrespective of the presence of females (non–pairing), to a derived condition in which males engage in elaborate courtship and assist females in the uptake of structurally complex spermatophores. In non–pairing taxa, sexual selection appears to be mediated through rapid male development and prolific spermatophore production. Males are invariably the smaller sex and do not fight over access to females. Why non–pairing has persisted in six of seven superfamilies remains an enigma. Cladistic analysis suggests that pair formation has evolved independently only once. Evidence from within the most diverse family, the Chernetidae, indicates that, once pair formation evolved, sexual dimorphism became a highly variable condition. Only in productive, and hence often ephemeral and patchily distributed, micro – habitats do populations reach densities at which selection for fighting ability outweighs the costs of attaining competitive size. The harlequin–beetle–riding pseudoscorpion, Cordylochernes scorpioides, has provided a model system both for assessing the influence of ecological factors on the operation of sexual selection and for identifying processes that can maintain variability in male sexually selected traits.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Evolution of Mating Systems in Insects and Arachnids , pp. 329 - 339Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
- 13
- Cited by