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The animals in the phylum Mollusca (e.g., clams, snails, and squid) display a diversity of reproductive behaviour. The majority of the amphineurans (chitons) and pelecypods (e.g., clams, oysters) are dioecious—i.e., individuals are either male or female. Because most species simply shed their eggs and sperm directly into the sea, individuals tend to form dense aggregations during the breeding period. The environmental factor that triggers the release of eggs and sperm has not yet been established with certainty, but, at least in a few species, after one individual has shed its sex products, the others follow in a kind of chain reaction that is clearly chemical in nature. In some mollusks, however, such as the European oyster, the eggs are retained and brooded.

The snails and slugs include hermaphroditic as well as dioecious species. Copulation in the hermaphroditic land snail Helix is preceded by a curious courtship involving a bizarre tactile stimulation. When the two partners come together, each drives a calcareous dart (the so-called love dart) into the body wall of the other with such force that it is buried deep in the other’s internal organs.

To avoid predators, some arboreal slugs copulate in mid-air while each partner is suspended by a viscous thread. In the slipper-shell snails (Crepidula), which are rather sessile, all the young are males; their subsequent sex, however, is determined by their nearest neighbour. They remain males as long as they are near a female but change into females if isolated or placed near another male.

Remarkably advanced courtship behaviour in the cephalopods, particularly the squids, involves complex visual displays of movement and changes in colour pattern. Males signify that they are ready for breeding by assuming a distinctive zebra-striped pattern, displaying their fourth arm in a flattened manner, and approaching other individuals with a jerky motion. This fourth arm in squids and the third arm in octopods, called a hectocotylus, is structurally modified for carrying spermatophores, or balls of sperm. The male cuttlefish (Sepia) places the spermatophores in a pocket near the female’s mouth, from which the sperm subsequently make their way to the tubes that carry eggs (oviducts). In no squid studied thus far do either of the sexes care for the fertilized eggs, which are laid on vegetation. This is not the case with octopuses, however; at least in Octopus vulgaris, the female broods her large number of eggs (about 150,000) for as long as six weeks. During this period she aerates the egg clusters and keeps them free of detritus, exhibiting remarkable behaviour for an animal that produces so many eggs. Brood care such as this is usually associated only with organisms that produce a small number of eggs.

Arthropods

Crustaceans

With a few exceptions, barnacles are the only hermaphroditic members of the class Crustacea in the phylum Arthropoda. This is in agreement with the theory that a sessile mode of life tends to be correlated with hermaphroditism. Thus, it is not important for the organism to be near an individual of the opposite sex, but simply to be near any individual of the same species.

Some barnacles are parasitic and have undergone a radical degeneration in form. One, Sacculina, is an example of the way in which the reproductive necessities of one species can profoundly affect the reproductive behaviour of another—in this case, the host. Several cells from a larval barnacle penetrate a crab’s body and migrate through the bloodstream until they reach the lower portion of its stomach. The cells then send rootlike projections throughout the crab’s body. When the crab molts, the barnacle protrudes a large bulbous portion of its body through the ventral (bottom) surface of the crab. If the crab is a female, its broad shell protects this structure, which contains the barnacle’s reproductive organs. The body shape of the male crab, however, is much narrower and does not provide such protection. If the host is a male, therefore, the barnacle first consumes the host’s testes; at its next molt, the crab assumes the shape of a female. Should the parasite be removed, the crab regains a male appearance and regenerates its testes.

In the copepods (e.g., sea lice, Cyclops) and the amphipods (e.g., beach fleas), the sexes are mostly separate, copulation is brief and without elaboration, and the female of both groups broods the fertilized eggs. The eggs of copepods are usually attached in two clusters to the rear of the female; many amphipods have a special pouch on their ventral surface for brooding the eggs. Many copepods and some amphipods are parasitic on fish and on such marine mammals as whales.

In the crustacean order Decapoda, which includes shrimp, crayfish, lobsters, and crabs, the sexes are separate, fertilization is mostly internal, and egg laying usually occurs shortly after copulation. In terrestrial crabs, however, the females of which migrate to salt water to expel the eggs, the sperm are stored, and fertilization and egg laying are delayed for several months after copulation.

Fiddler crabs of the genus Uca and several other decapods show territorial behaviour, an act that is not very common among invertebrates. As in many groups in which males defend territories, male crabs often differ in appearance from the females. Males are much more brightly coloured than the females, and one of their front claws is greatly enlarged; the mostly dull-coloured females have two small front claws. Depending on the species, males perform either simple or complex rhythmic dances in front of their sand burrows. The waving and vertical movement of the large claw is apparently species specific.

As in squids and octopuses, the sperm of primitive terrestrial arthropods—millipedes, centipedes, springtails, and silverfish—are often transferred from males to females in structures called spermatophores. During the transition from an aquatic to a terrestrial mode of life, spermatophores became necessary, particularly for those species that had not developed copulatory organs for direct transmission of sperm. Because sperm transfer in these animals is often complicated and takes considerable time, the delicate sperm would be in danger of drying up, were it not for the moisture contained in the spermatophores. It would appear, therefore, that all species that exhibit indirect sperm transfer in which spermatophores are utilized have not achieved complete independence of water.

Males of most primitive soil-dwelling arthropod species place sperm drops on threads in damp locations or use threads or chemical products to guide females to externally placed spermatophores. Most male millipedes have secondary genital appendages called gonopods, by which they transfer the spermatophore directly to the genital opening of the female. One millipede actually uses a “tool” in sperm transfer; the male rounds a fecal pellet, places a drop of sperm on it, and, using its legs, passes the pellet back along its body to a point opposite the female’s genital pore. Paired body projections then are used to inject the sperm into the female, and the pellet is dropped. Males of the common bark-inhabiting millipede Polyxenus transfer sperm by spinning thin threads on which they place sperm drops; they then construct two parallel thicker threads on which they place a pheromone to attract the female. This chemical and tactile guidance system causes the sperm to become attached to the female’s vulva (the external part of the female’s genital organs). Males eat the sperm not picked up and replenish it with fresh sperm.

Arachnids

The arachnids (e.g., spiders and scorpions) exhibit the earliest pattern of classical courtship behaviour during which rather ritualized movements are involved. In the true scorpions this behaviour takes the form of the promenade à deux, in which the male holds the female by her front claws and apparently stings her in a joint near the base of the claw. The ensuing dancelike pattern apparently results from the male seeking a suitable surface upon which to deposit his spermatophore. After he deposits the spermatophore, the male drags the female over it, releasing her after the spermatophore has passed into her genital pore.

As mentioned above, many male spiders have a particular problem in approaching the aggressive and predatory female in order to deposit a spermatophore. The hunting behaviour of most spiders is adapted to react to the slightest movement or vibration of the web, causing the spider to rush forward and bite its prey as quickly as possible. Thus, it is not surprising that male spiders have evolved fairly elaborate display movements and patterns to convey their identity. Many males are quite strikingly coloured, providing additional information about their identity. Some males approach the female only at night and vibrate her web in a highly characteristic manner, different from that caused by the struggling of a trapped animal.