Mating
In most groups, after a male has successfully approached a female and mounted her, he inserts his left pedipalp into the left opening of her genital structure and the right pedipalp into the right opening. In some primitive spiders (e.g., haplogynes, mygalomorphs) and a few others, the male inserts both pedipalps simultaneously into the female’s genital slit.
The female genital structure, or epigynum, is a hardened plate on the underside of the abdomen in front of the gonopore. After the sperm are transferred into the epigynum, they move into receptacles (spermathecae) that connect to the oviducts. Eggs are fertilized as they pass through the oviducts and out through the gonopore.
The force that causes the injection of sperm from the pedipalp of the male into the receptacle of the female has not been established with certainty but may involve increased blood pressure expanding the soft vascular tissue (hematodocha) between the hard plates of pedipalps. This causes a bulbous structure containing a duct to twist and to hook into the epigynum of the female and inject the sperm as if they were being squeezed from a bulb syringe.
Mating may require only seconds in some species but hours in others. Some males recharge their pedipalps and mate again with the same female. After mating, the males of some species smear a secretion over the epigynum, called an epigynal plug, that prevents the female from mating a second time. Male spiders usually die soon after, or even during, the mating process. The female of one European orb weaver species bites into the abdomen of the male and holds on during mating. Although some females eat the male after mating, this practice is not common. The male of the black widow (genus Latrodectus), for example, usually dies days after mating, although occasionally he is so weak after mating that he is captured and eaten by the female. Male Nephilengys malabarensis spiders of Southeast Asia and the southwestern Pacific region are thought to escape sexual cannibalism through remote copulation, in which the male’s copulatory organ detaches during mating and remains in the female, enabling prolonged sperm transfer. Females of some species mate only once, whereas others mate several times with the same male or mate with several different males. The long-lived females of mygalomorph spiders must mate repeatedly because they shed their skins once or twice a year, including the lining of the spermathecae.