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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
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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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BookDOI

Sociality: The Behaviour of Group-Living Animals

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Factors Influencing Site Abandonment and Site Selection in a Sit-and-Wait Predator: A Review of Pit-Building Antlion Larvae

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Foraging decisions and behavioural flexibility in trap-building predators: a review.

TL;DR: Evidence is provided that the behaviour of trap‐building predators is not stereotypic or fixed as was once commonly accepted, rather it can vary greatly, depending on the individual's internal state and its interactions with external environmental factors.
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Optimal individual positions within animal groups

TL;DR: This work uses simulation models to demonstrate how predation risk and food gains differ for different positions within a group, and develops a novel model of the trade-off between the costs and the benefits of occupying different positions and predicts the optimal location for an animal in a group.
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Shadow competition in wild juvenile sea‐trout

TL;DR: This study is the first to demonstrate shadow competition in a vertebrate species, but has also shown that territorial defence may modify the consequences of shadow competition when densities are high and there is strong competition for the acquisition of a territory.
References
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Journal Article

Factores selectivos que afectan la tendencia a agruparse en la araña colonial Philoponella semiplumosa (Araneae; Uloboridae)

TL;DR: The spider Philoponella semiplumosa in NW Costa Rica lives both alone and in colonial webs, with the relative numbers of solitary and colonial individuals differing in different habitats.
Journal ArticleDOI

Activity of the Namib Desert dune ant, Camponotus detritus

TL;DR: The activity of the ant Camponotus detritus was studied in the dunes of the central Namib Desert and the number of ants collecting honeydew was negatively correlated with air temperature while in winter it was positively correlated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Relationship between prey consumption and colony size in an orb spider.

TL;DR: The relationship between prey consumption and colony size in the orb spiderPhiloponella semiplumosa was influenced by coloniality directly, rather than by a correlation between prey abundance at a site and colonies size.