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Sexual coercion does not exclude luring behavior in the climbing camel-spider Oltacola chacoensis (Arachnida,Solifugae, Ammotrechidae)
Authors:Alfredo V. Peretti  Rodrigo H. Willemart
Affiliation:1.CONICET - Cátedra de Diversidad Animal I, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales,Universidad Nacional de Córdoba,Córdoba,Argentina;2.Departamento de Zoologia, Instituto de Biociências,Universidade de S?o Paulo,S?o Paulo,Brazil
Abstract:Sexual coercion in the form of forced copulation has been used as a typical example to illustrate the conflict of interests between females and males. Among arthropods, forced copulation has been reported for some groups of insects and crustaceans, but not for arachnids. In the present work, we analyse and describe the behavioral patterns of mating behavior of the climbing camel-spider, Oltacola chacoensis, relating it to relevant morphological features, In this species, the male forcefully clasps the female’s genital region with his chelicerae and locks her fourth pair of legs with his pedipalps. In some cases, the cuticle of the female’s abdomen was damaged by this cheliceral clasping. In contrast to other camel-spiders, the female O. chacoensis never remained motionless during mating, but continuously shook her body, opening her chelicerae notably towards the male. Despite this coercive context, males performed copulatory courtship (tapping with pedipalps) and females showed an apparent cooperative behavior (they remained still during a short period of the sperm transfer phase). These results strengthen the idea that sexual coercion (in the form of forced copulation) and luring behavior (in the form of copulatory courtship) are not two mutually-exclusive male’s strategies during a single copulation.
Keywords:Sexual coercion  Forced copulation  Sexual dimorphism  Clasping structures  Copulatory courtship  Arachnids  Camel-spiders
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