Strange, but interesting, fact from the natural world
Need for Speed
Heres a consummately unequal partnership for you: male cobweb spiders (genus Tidarren) weigh in at only about 1 percent the weight of the females. Not surprisingly, that creates a few problems.
The male has two copulatory organs known as pedipalps, and either one can make him a dad. To do the job properly, each pedipalp has to be enormous, relative to the rest of his body. Sure enough, the two make up about 20 percent of his body weight more, apparently, than hes willing to carry around. So, just before molting into his adult form, the male Tidarren half-emasculates himself. He spins a silk structure, ties it around one just one of his pedipalps, and then twists off the unwanted organ.
Working in the laboratory of Duncan J. Irschick, an ecologist at Tulane University in New Orleans, undergrad Margarita Ramos and a colleague quantified how much the pedipalps drag males down. By chasing spiders, the investigators found that males with a single pedipalp move 44 percent faster, have 63 percent more endurance, and travel 300 percent farther before pooping out than males with both pedipalps intact. Evolution didnt come up with a way to grow just one pedipalp so as to increase mobility, but it did find a behavioral work-around. (Overcoming an evolutionary conflict: Removal of a reproductive organ greatly increases locomotor performance, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101: 4883 87, April 6, 2004)
[Reprinted from Natural History, June 2004, page 17]
Self castration in spiders
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JesusA (imported)
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SplitDik (imported)
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Re: Self castration in spiders
Actually they probably evolved to start with two on purpose -- that way they can choose to keep the one that will function better. Sort of like why mammals have two testicles -- need a backup.