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Journal ArticleDOI

Costs of aggregation: shadow competition in a sit-and-wait predator

Yael Lubin, +2 more
- 01 Oct 2001 - 
- Vol. 95, Iss: 1, pp 59-68
TLDR
Modeling confirmed that shadow competition adequately explains the patterns of foraging, growth and survival of sedentary foragers such as these spiders, and is likely to have wider implications for other sit-and-wait predators.
Abstract
Shadow competition, when sedentary foragers closer to a source of food reduce its availability to those further away, is predicted to increase with the size and density of a group. We tested the occurrence of shadow competition and examined its consequences for a burrowing spider Seothyra henscheli (Eresidae) in the Namib Desert. Differences between individual spiders occurring inside or on the periphery of clusters compared to solitary spiders were examined in a natural population, by experimental manipulation of densities and by computer simulation of the experimental manipulation. Spiders in the population grew more slowly in clusters than did solitary spiders and this was confirmed by the experiment. The experiment showed that spiders grew more rapidly on the periphery of a cluster than inside it, but that survival showed the opposite trend. The largest effect was in the highest density, where all spiders maintained active webs throughout the experiment, indicating a state of hunger. Modeling indicated that such effects may be explained by the way ants, the principal prey of the spiders, reach spider webs at different locations within the patches of different densities. Modeling confirmed that shadow competition adequately explains the patterns of foraging, growth and survival of sedentary foragers such as these spiders, and is likely to have wider implications for other sit-and-wait predators.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental Evidence for the Amelioration of Shadow Competition in an Orb‐Web Spider Through the ‘Ricochet’ Effect

TL;DR: This study shows experimentally that a spider that builds its web close to a conspecific’s web suffers very little cost in terms of lost prey interception, and the degree of overlap between the webs significantly influences both the number of prey intercepted as well as thenumber of ricochets.
Journal ArticleDOI

Group dynamics and relocation decisions of a trap-building predator are differentially affected by biotic and abiotic factors.

TL;DR: Under the fine spatial scale of the present experiment, biotic factors appear to be more influential than abiotic ones, and wormlions responded strongly to biotic conditions by either increasing pit-relocation events or moving away from the microhabitat center to the periphery of the arena, probably opting for a way out.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential effects of variance in prey arrival on foraging success and growth rate of two pit-building antlion species

TL;DR: These two antlion species differed in their prey capture success, starvation and thermal tolerance, and it is suggested that their tolerance to variance in feeding opportunities and functional response offer an additional axis that enables them to coexist in the same desert habitats.

Sexual size dimorphism in burrowing wolf spiders (araneae: lycosidae)

D. V. Logunov
TL;DR: This paper presents an overview of various aspects of sexual size dimorphism in the Lycosidae, with particular emphasis on burrowing wolf spiders, and argues that understanding the evolutionary origin of extreme SSD in wolf spiders is better elucidated by examining life-history theory integrated with aspects of whole organism ontogeny.
References
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Book

Ecology: Individuals Populations and Communities

TL;DR: A revised and updated edition of this textbook is presented in this paper, with a clear presentation of mathematical aspects and the material aims to be accessible to the undergraduate with little experience and also stimulating to practising ecologists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geometry for the selfish herd.

TL;DR: An antithesis to the view that gregarious behaviour is evolved through benefits to the population or species is presented, and simply defined models are used to show that even in non-gregarious species selection is likely to favour individuals who stay close to others.
Book

Spiders in Ecological Webs

David H. Wise
TL;DR: The spider in the ecological play is a central character in the story of how spiders avoid competition and the impact of spiders on insect populations and competitionist views of spider communities are examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foraging strategies of spiders.

TL;DR: Spiders are regarded with keen interest as model organisms in behavioral ecology because of their small size, short lifespan, and the strong influence of genetic control on their behavior.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trade-offs in foraging success and predation risk with spatial position in colonial spiders

TL;DR: Spiders in the core of the colony have greater reproductive success, producing more egg sacs with greater hatching frequency, and show a spatial organization predicted by the selfish herd theory.