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Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of food supply on foraging behaviour in a desert spider

Yael Lubin, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1996 - 
- Vol. 105, Iss: 1, pp 64-73
TLDR
It is suggested that digestive constraints prevented supplemented spiders from fully utilizing the available prey, and by reducing foraging activities on the surface, spiders in a prey-rich habitat can reduce the risk of predation.
Abstract
We tested the alternative hypotheses that foraging effort will increase (energy maximizer model) or decrease (due to increased costs or risks) when food supply increased, using a Namib desert burrowing spider, Seothyra henscheli (Eresidae), which feeds mainly on ants. The web of S. henscheli has a simple geometrical configuration, comprising a horizontal mat on the sand surface, with a variable number of lobes lined with sticky silk. The sticky silk is renewed daily after being covered by wind-blown sand. In a field experiment, we supplemented the spiders' natural prey with one ant on each day that spiders had active webs and determined the response to an increase in prey. We compared the foraging activity and web geometry of prey-supplemented spiders to non-supplemented controls. We compared the same parameters in fooddeprived and supplemented spiders in captivity. The results support the "costs of foraging" hypothesis. Supplemented spiders reduced their foraging activity and web dimensions. They moulted at least once and grew rapidly, more than doubling their mass in 6 weeks. By contrast, food-deprived spiders increased foraging effort by enlarging the diameter of the capture web. We suggest that digestive constraints prevented supplemented spiders from fully utilizing the available prey. By reducing foraging activities on the surface, spiders in a prey-rich habitat can reduce the risk of predation. However, early maturation resulting from a higher growth rate provides no advantage to S. henscheli owing to the fact that the timing of mating and dispersal are fixed by climatic factors (wind and temperature). Instead, large female body size will increase fitness by increasing the investiment in young during the period of extended maternal care.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Previous foraging success influences web building in the spider Stegodyphus lineatus (Eresidae)

TL;DR: The hypothesis that the previous foraging success of the spider influences the effort invested in foraging was tested and it was concluded that for S. lineatus immediate foraging risks outweigh the potential time constraints on foraging.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of sand depth, feeding regime, density, and body mass on the foraging behaviour of a pit‐building antlion

TL;DR: This work studied how biotic and abiotic factors affect pit diameter and depth, while taking into account the larval body mass in pit‐building antlions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intriguing compensation by adult female spiders for food limitation experienced as juveniles

TL;DR: Control females, the spiders that had not changed their foraging activity, gained mass more rapidly than the previously fed females, with the result that the two groups were similar in mass by the end of the mating period.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mortality risk of rapid growth in the spider Nephila clavipes

TL;DR: Spiders receiving higher amounts of food were more likely to die at or immediately before the next moulting cycle, indicating that there may be inherent physiological costs of rapidly increasing mass in opportunistic feeders such as spiders that tend to gorge when prey are abundant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Foraging behaviour of a neglected pit-building predator: the wormlion

TL;DR: A combination of field observations and laboratory experiments are used to investigate how hunger and ecological factors such as density and spatial pattern affect pit size, that is, how they shape investment in foraging and indicate competition between neighbouring larvae.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The evolution of life histories

TL;DR: In this article, age and size at maturity at maturity number and size of offspring Reproductive lifespan and ageing are discussed. But the authors focus on the effects of age and stage structure on fertility.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biometry: the principles and practice of statistics in biological research 2nd edition.

TL;DR: The book aims to instill in students an ability to think through biological research problems in such a way as to grasp the essentials of the experimental or analytical setup to know which types of statistical tests to apply in a given case and to carry out the computations required.
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

Nutritional ecology of insects, mites, spiders, and related invertebrates

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta- Ecology of Insect Folivores of Woody Plants: Nitrogen, Water, Fiber and Mineral Considerations, andritional Ecology of Grass Foliage-Chewing Insects and Phytophagous Mites.
Book ChapterDOI

Habitat structure and spider foraging

TL;DR: Barth et al. as discussed by the authors observed that the physiognomy or physical structure of environments has an important influence on the habitat preferences of spider species, and ultimately on the composition of spider communities.