An experimental approach to altering mating tactics in male horseshoe crabs (Limulus polyphemus) |
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Authors: | Brockmann H. Jane |
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Affiliation: | Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-8525, USA |
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Abstract: | Alternative reproductive tactics are often correlated with phenotype,density, environment, or social context. Male horseshoe crabs(Limulus polyphemus) have two mating tactics that are associatedwith phenotype. Males in good condition arrive at the nestingbeach and spawn while attached to females, whereas those inpoorer condition come ashore unattached and crowd around thenesting couples as satellites, fertilizing eggs through spermcompetition. The correlation between mating tactic and phenotypemay be due to males choosing tactics based on condition, orit may be that males that have not found a female choose tocome ashore as satellites. To distinguish between these twopossibilities, I conducted an experiment on male horseshoe crabsin the field at Seahorse Key on the northern Gulf coast ofFlorida. I prevented males from attaching to females by placingsmall plastic bags over the claws they use to attach. The resultsshowed that males in poor condition came ashore as satellites,whereas males in good condition remained at sea. This meansthat mating tactics are cued by information about the male'scondition and not about whether he found a female. The evolutionof phenotype-correlated mating tactics can be represented bya model in which the fitness of each tactic changes with conditionand fitness curves cross. I hypothesize that male horseshoecrabs in good condition have higher fitness when attached andthat males in poorer condition to better when unattached. |
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Keywords: | alternative mating tactics alternative reproductive behavior alternative strategies conditional strategies frequency-dependent selection horseshoe crabs Limulus polyphemus. |
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