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Mechanics of the Prey Capture Technique of the South African Grassland Bolas Spider, Cladomelea akermani
SIMPLE SUMMARY: Spiders are an order of organisms with highly diverse predatory techniques. All species produce silk and utilize varying degrees of adhesion to ensnare and trap prey long enough to envenomate them. Many spider families can be distinguished by their prey capture strategies, the silk s...
Autores principales: | , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
MDPI
2022
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9785433/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36555028 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13121118 |
Sumario: | SIMPLE SUMMARY: Spiders are an order of organisms with highly diverse predatory techniques. All species produce silk and utilize varying degrees of adhesion to ensnare and trap prey long enough to envenomate them. Many spider families can be distinguished by their prey capture strategies, the silk structures they create, and the mechanical properties of the silk they spin. Understanding the diversity and function of these glues has much to teach us about natural bioadhesives and has application to our own synthetic adhesives. The most derived orb-webs are spun by bolas spiders, consisting of only a single capture thread, lined with a few glue droplets—often only one at the end. This web reduction must be accompanied by a strong glue. Additionally, the species Cladomelea akermani consistently spins its bolas and bounces. We use high-speed video to observe the prey-capture technique of C. akermani. The spider’s willingness to spin allowed us to record and measure the kinematics of their unique bouncing, bolas spinning behavior, and overall prey capture technique. We then tested the additional hypothesis that this bouncing behavior serves an additional purpose in pheromone distribution by creating a computational fluid dynamics model. Spinning in an open environment creates turbulent air, spreading pheromones further and creating a pocket of pheromones. Conversely, spinning within a tree does little to affect the natural airflow. ABSTRACT: Spiders use various combinations of silks, adhesives, and behaviors to ensnare prey. One common but difficult-to-catch prey is moths. They easily escape typical orb-webs because their bodies are covered in tiny sacrificial scales that flake off when in contact with the web’s adhesives. This defense is defeated by spiders of the sub-family of Cyrtarachninae—moth-catching specialists who combine changes in orb-web structure, predatory behavior, and chemistry of the aggregate glue placed in those webs. The most extreme changes in web structure are shown by the bolas spiders which create only one or two glue droplets at the end of a single thread. They prey on male moths by releasing pheromones to draw them close. Here, we confirm the hypothesis that the spinning behavior of the spider is directly used to spin its glue droplets using a high-speed video camera to observe the captured behavior of the bolas spider Cladomelea akermani as it actively spins its body and bolas. We use the kinematics of the spider and bolas to begin to quantify and model the physical and mechanical properties of the bolas during prey capture. We then examine why this species chooses to spin its body, an energetically costly behavior, during prey capture. We test the hypothesis that spinning helps to spread pheromones by creating a computational fluid dynamics model of airflow within an open field and comparing it to that of airflow within a tree, a common environment for bolas spiders that do not spin. Spinning in an open environment creates turbulent air, spreading pheromones further and creating a pocket of pheromones. Conversely, spinning within a tree does little to affect the natural airflow. |
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