Faculty Opinions recommendation of Exploration behaviour and behavioural flexibility in orb-web spiders: A review.

Author(s):  
Lars Chittka ◽  
Clint Perry
2015 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 313-327 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Hesselberg

Abstract Orb-web spiders and their webs constitute an ideal model system in which to study behavioural flexibility and spatial cognition in invertebrates due to the easily quantifiable nature of the orb web. A large number of studies demonstrate how spiders are able to modify the geometry of their webs in response to a range of different conditions including the ability to adapt their webs to spatial constraints. However, the mechanisms behind this impressive web-building flexibility in these cognitively limited animals remain poorly explored. One possible mechanism though may be spatial learning during the spiders’ exploration of their immediate surroundings. This review discusses the importance of exploration behaviour, the reliance on simple behavioural rules, and the use of already laid threads as guidelines for web-building in orb-web spiders. The focus is on the spiders’ ability to detect and adapt their webs to space limitations and other spatial disruptions. I will also review the few published studies on how spatial information is gathered during the exploration phase and discuss the possibility of the use of ‘cognitive map’-like processes in spiders. Finally, the review provides suggestions for designing experimental studies to shed light on whether spiders gather metric information during the site exploration (cognitive map hypothesis) or rely on more simple binary information in combination with previously laid threads to build their webs (stigmergy hypothesis).


2017 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 262-275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dzulhelmi Muhammad Nasir ◽  
Thary Gazi Goh ◽  
Asraf Bakri ◽  
Faszly Rahim ◽  
Zulqarnain Mohamed ◽  
...  

Ethology ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 125 (5) ◽  
pp. 289-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nikolas J. Willmott ◽  
Jessica Henneken ◽  
Mark A. Elgar ◽  
Therésa M. Jones

Behaviour ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 145 (3) ◽  
pp. 277-295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felipe Gawryszewski ◽  
Paulo Motta

AbstractSeveral orb-web spiders build conspicuous decorations in their webs. The prey attraction hypothesis proposes that decorations increase spider foraging success by attracting prey, and that attraction is linked to UV reflectance. Alternatively, the web advertisement hypothesis proposes that decorations are a signal that advertises the presence of the web to large animals. We tested both hypotheses for the web silk tufts of Gasteracantha cancriformis. Even though tufts are UV reflective, we did not find support for the prey attraction hypothesis. In the field, when webs with tufts painted black and control webs were compared, there were no differences in the number of prey captured, number of damaged areas in webs and type of prey captured. In the laboratory, Drosophila melanogaster did not demonstrate preference for tufted silk lines versus non-tufted silk lines. Our data also did not give support for the web advertisement hypothesis. The proportion of web destruction was similar between web with tufts painted black and control webs during four days of experimentation. Therefore, two of the most favoured hypotheses that attempt to explain decorations do not apply for web silk tufts in our study system. Instead we propose that silk tufts might be an aposematic signal.


Author(s):  
Fernanda Carolina da Silva ◽  
Mateus Moleta ◽  
Camila Alves Dos Anjos ◽  
Gabriel Marra Schade ◽  
Gabriel Staichak ◽  
...  

Behaviour ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 150 (12) ◽  
pp. 1345-1356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael L. Rodríguez ◽  
Robb C. Kolodziej ◽  
Gerlinde Höbel

Nephila clavipes spiders accumulate prey larders on their webs. We conducted a field experiment to ask if the spiders search for larders that have been pilfered (experimentally mimicking the potential effect of kleptoparasites), and to ask if the spiders vary their search efforts according to the size of the larder. All spiders searched for larders removed from their web, and spiders that lost larger larders (i.e., consisting of more prey items) searched for longer intervals. We thus suggest that N. clavipes form memories of the size of the larders they have accumulated, and that they use those memories to regulate recovery efforts when the larders are pilfered. The content of those memories may include discrete prey counts or the accumulation of a continuous variable correlated with counts, such as the total mass of captured prey. We discuss the adaptive significance of this ability in the framework of costs related to kleptoparasites and the ecology of food hoarding.


2002 ◽  
Vol 357 (1418) ◽  
pp. 155-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. P. Knight ◽  
F. Vollrath

Liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) have recently been described as a new class of matter. Here we review the evidence for the novel conclusion that the fibrillar collagens and the dragline silks of orb web spiders belong to this remarkable class of materials. Unlike conventional rubbers, LCEs are ordered, rather than disordered, at rest. The identification of these biopolymers as LCEs may have a predictive value. It may explain how collagens and spider dragline silks are assembled. It may provide a detailed explanation for their mechanical properties, accounting for the variation between different members of the collagen family and between the draglines in different spider species. It may provide a basis for the design of biomimetic collagen and dragline silk analogues by genetic engineering, peptide- or classical polymer synthesis. Biological LCEs may exhibit a range of exotic properties already identified in other members of this remarkable class of materials. In this paper, the possibility that other transversely banded fibrillar proteins are also LCEs is discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (127) ◽  
pp. 20160783 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas O. Wolff ◽  
Marie E. Herberstein

The anchorage of structures is a crucial element of construction, both for humans and animals. Spiders use adhesive plaques to attach silk threads to substrates. Both biological and artificial adhesive structures usually have an optimal loading angle, and are prone to varying loading situations. Silk anchorages, however, must cope with loading in highly variable directions. Here we show that the detachment forces of thread anchorages of orb-web spiders are highly robust against pulling in different directions. This is gained by a two-step back-and-forth spinning pattern during the rapid production of the adhesive plaque, which shifts the thread insertion point towards the plaque centre and forms a flexible tree root-like network of branching fibres around the loading point. Using a morphometric approach and a tape-and-thread model we show that neither area, nor width of the plaque, but the shift of the loading point towards the plaque centre has the highest effect on pull-off resistance. This is explained by a circular propagation of the delamination crack with a low peeling angle. We further show that silken attachment discs are highly directional and adjusted to provide maximal performance in the upstream dragline. These results show that the way the glue is applied, crucially enhances the toughness of the anchorage without the need of additional material intake. This work is a starting point to study the evolution of tough and universal thread anchorages among spiders, and to develop bioinspired ‘instant’ anchorages of thread- and cable-like structures to a broad bandwidth of substrates.


2010 ◽  
Vol 99 (4) ◽  
pp. 849-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
MATJAŽ KUNTNER ◽  
SIMONA KRALJ-FIŠER ◽  
MATJAŽ GREGORIČ

1978 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-57
Author(s):  
SHIGEKI YAMASHITA ◽  
HIDEKI TATEDA

Spectral sensitivities of the anterior median eyes of the orb web spiders, Argiope bruennichii and A. amoena have been studied by recording extracellular ERGs and intracellular receptor potentials. The anterior median eyes have three types of visual cells, with maximum sensitivities at about 360 nm (u.v. cell), 480-500 nm (blue cell) and 540 nm (green cell). The blue cells are the most sensitive and have a circadian oscillation of sensitivity. The green cells show a hypersensitivity, i.e. the sensitivity is greater for about 90 s after the cessation of illumination than during dark adaptation. Respiration is necessary for the maintenance of hypersensitivity.


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