Be My Valentine: Male and Female Garden Spiders

14 Feb
Sexually dimorphic yellow and black garden spiders on a web in Texas.

Sexually dimorphic garden spiders oppose each other on a web (Araneidae: Argiope). (Photo by Jessica Hyde)

For Valentine’s Day we have garden spiders.  These are the big spiders you find with the zig-zag patterns in their webs.  It turns out their mating habits are even more entertaining than I had thought (journal articles are fun!).

The much smaller males build mini-webs in at the edges of the females’ webs, often complete with their own tiny zig-zag.  Then the male commences a careful and prolonged courtship, plucking and vibrating the strands of the female’s web to play her a love song.  He’s trying desperately to convince her to mate with him before she decides to eat him.  In this case, his small size is an advantage.  His lady love may ignore him because he’s of little nutritional value.

Like other spiders, the male uses his pedipalps to transfer sperm.  This is the part where a previously quiescent female may turn vicious–a quarter of males are killed during the first insertion attempt.  The little male is hoping to manage one insertion with each pedipalp, as surviving through two insertions uneaten will increase the number of eggs he fertilizes.

After that, his lover’s appetite will become a moot point:  during the second insertion the male will spontaneously suffer a fatal seizure.   Although this could be interpreted as a romantic sacrificial gesture (box of chocolates, anyone?) it is more likely he is using his body as a plug, to try to block the access of other males.

Be mine, Valentine?

—-

Thanks to Jessica, who took the picture for me after I ran around the ranch house squeaking about dimorphism and catching grasshoppers to toss to the spiders.  Thanks also to the spiders, who caught me a gorgeous buprestid specimen which I stole and unwrapped.

(Elgar 1991; Foellmer 2004; Hickey & Lee 2004)

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4 Responses to “Be My Valentine: Male and Female Garden Spiders”

  1. Unbiased Viewer February 14, 2011 at 9:08 pm #

    The Valentine’s 6-Legs Offering was exceptional! I love the holiday specials!

  2. Ted C. MacRae February 15, 2011 at 4:08 pm #

    What was the buprestid?

    • 6legs2many February 23, 2011 at 7:00 pm #

      I’m not up on my buprestid genera…
      About an inch long, dark brown, deeply grooved, with a copper ventral surface.
      I’ve seen smaller ones that look similar, but this was a big one for me. 🙂

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Hanna’s Web: My Garden Spider Resident - August 29, 2011

    […] likes, she builds a web and often stays there for the rest of her life.  While the males wander, looking for mates and a sex driven death, and rarely make webs. So, if you see a garden spider, A) it was big enough to see,  B) it likely […]

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