scispace - formally typeset
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
Reads0
Chats0
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.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Cannibalism, food limitation, intraspecific competition, and the regulation of spider populations

TL;DR: This review first briefly treats the different types of spider cannibalism and then focuses in more depth on evidence relating cannibalism to population dynamics and food web interactions to address the following questions.
Journal ArticleDOI

An estimated 400-800 million tons of prey are annually killed by the global spider community.

TL;DR: The presented estimates of the global annual prey kill and the relative contribution of spider predation in different biomes improve the general understanding of spider ecology and provide a first assessment of theglobal impact of this very important predator group.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of experience in web-building spiders (Araneidae)

TL;DR: Experienced web-building spiders constructed more asymmetric webs than conspecifics deprived of any prior building experience over a period of several months, revealing that experience can contribute to intraspecific as well as to individual variations in web design.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Foraging at the thermal limit: burrowing spiders ( Seothyra , Eresidae) in the Namib desert dunes

TL;DR: The hypothesis that web design and thermoregulatory behaviors enable Seothyra to hunt under extreme thermal conditions is supported, and the range of thermal conditions encountered by spiders, their temperature tolerance and the influence of temperature on foraging activity and prey handling behavior is determined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in Orb Webs of Spiders During Growth (Araneus Diadematus Clerck and Neoscona Vertebrata Mc Cook) 1)2)

TL;DR: Photographs of the webs of 14 individuals hatched from one egg cocoon and 6 individuals taken while the spiders grew up in the laboratory showed that webs increased in size during the first two to three months of the spiders' life as long as legs grew longer; after that both stayed about the same size.
Journal Article

Ontogenetic and Seasonal Changes in Webs and Websites of a Desert Widow Spider

TL;DR: The results indicate that the relative quality of potential websites changes seasonally and with spider growth and suggest that the costs of relocating a web outweigh the advantages of reaching a new website, and that spiders remain for some time in websites which have become less suitable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Diet and foraging behaviour of huntsman spiders in the Namib dunes (Araneae: Heteropodidae)

J. R. Henschel
- 01 Oct 1994 - 
TL;DR: Diet and foraging behaviour of three species of burrowing huntsman spiders from the Namib dunes were investigated over a three-year period, finding that Namib huntsmen are sit-and-wait predators within narrow territories waiting for the fortuitous arrival of prey and are thus unlikely to limit prey populations.