There is a potential trade-off between exhibiting anti-predator behaviors and engaging in reproductive behavior in the presence of a predator. Although anti-predator behaviors (e.g., avoidance, vigilance) are well documented in the small wolf spider Pardosa milvina when in the presence of chemical cues of the large wolf spider Hogna helluo, little is known about the effect of predator cues (or predators) on the reproductive behavior of Pardosa. The goal of this study was to determine how the predator species, Hogna, affected the reproductive behavior, specifically mate location, in Pardosa. We hypothesized that the presence of the predator or cue will cause the prey to alter reproductive behavior so that the ability to locate a mate is compromised. In replicates with an actual predator, the Hogna ate the Pardosa without any sex bias. Courtship was initiated in these replicates but the time to courtship did not differ in relation to the control. Chemical cues from the predator significantly increased the time it took for males and females to locate each other. These results provide specific evidence for how predation risk might interfere with reproduction in a small wolf spider.