<![CDATA[io9: weta]]> http://tags.lifehacker.com/assets/base/img/thumbs140x140/io9.com.png <![CDATA[io9: weta]]> http://io9.com/tag/weta http://io9.com/tag/weta <![CDATA[Ray-Blunderbuss Available: It's What The Refined Astronauts Use]]> We're all familiar with the sexy-as-hell ray gun collection from Weta. Well, now your very own ray-blunderbuss is available for pre-order. This ray gun is packing one hell of a muzzle, and if it's anything like its ancestor, this thing is going to spray death rays all over your enemies' faces. Prices for the “The Unnatural Selector" range from $4,500 to $7,900. [Weatanz]

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<![CDATA[Why Nature Prefers a Small Man to Mate with a Big Woman]]> If you watch enough TV, you get the idea that the ideal mating combination is a skinny little woman and a burly man. But a new evolutionary study published in American Naturalist shows that's not what nature intended. In fact, the humble New Zealand weta (a relative of the cricket) demonstrates that evolution often pushes in the other direction: Only the smallest and most nimble weta males get to score with the sexy weta ladies who are twice their size. How could tiny males impress the weta females?

Among these hopping insects, it's not uncommon for the males to travel up to 90 meters per night searching for a mate, which would be the equivalent of a human man walking 7 kilometers per night in search of a lady friend. Size does matter among the weta — it's just that being lightweight allows the male to show off his walking prowess much better than a large body would. Female wetas tend to walk much less, and when they do find a little male they like, they spend the whole next day mating with him nonstop.

How do we know this, you ask? Apparently our group of researchers, who hail from Toronto, put microchips on male and female wetas and tracked them. Then, when these researchers found the mating wetas, they counted the empty sperm packets called "spermatophores" that were piled up around them. Then they could estimate whether weta who walked further got more chances with the old spermataphores. Know what I mean? Wink, wink, nudge, nudge?

Said researcher Clint Kelly:

Our findings are a rare example of sexual selection favoring a suite of traits that promote greater mobility in one sex only. This is exciting because it suggests that sexual selection for smaller, more mobile males could be responsible for some of the impressive sexual difference in body size in this species.

It also shows why sometimes a small man and a big woman make the very best pair. Weta portrait via New Zealand Department of Conservation.

Sexual Selection for Male Mobility [via American Naturalist]

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<![CDATA[Kiwi Togs For Justice Leaguers]]> Producer Barrie Osborne let the news slip that the New Zealand based WETA Workshop will be designing the costumes for the upcoming Justice League movie. Additional WETA Digital will be working on some of the digital effects, if they have time. While the costume part should lead to some awesome results (we can't wait to see what the new Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman costumes will look like), it's the "if they have time" for the digital effects part that alarms us.

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