Sexual cannibalism is when a female
cannibalizes her mate prior to, during, or after copulation. It is a phenomenon characterized primarily by members of
arachnid orders as well as several
insect orders. The adaptive foraging hypothesis, aggressive spillover hypothesis and mistaken identity hypothesis are several hypotheses that have been proposed to explain how sexual cannibalism evolved. This behavior is believed to have evolved as a manifestation of
sexual conflict, occurring when the reproductive interests of males and females differ. In many species that exhibit sexual cannibalism, the female consumes the male upon detection. Females of cannibalistic species are generally hostile and unwilling to mate; thus many males of these species have developed adaptive behaviors to counteract female aggression.