New research has identified how social spiders evolved different ways of hunting in groups.
Social spiders have different ways of hunting in groups

New research has identified how social spiders evolved different ways of hunting in groups. While these spiders have evolved socially similar behaviors -- living in large family groups that share both communal nests and childcare duties -- the findings suggest environmental conditions may have shaped how species developed different strategies of cooperating in hunting.

Spiders are normally solitary creatures but a few species have evolved to be social and live in groups, known as colonies.

While these spiders have evolved socially similar behaviours -- living in large family groups that share both communal nests and childcare duties -- the findings suggest environmental conditions may have shaped how species developed different strategies of cooperating in hunting.

An international team of researchers, led by the University of Portsmouth, explored the different responses to prey stuck in the webs among three social species of velvet spiders and found substantial differences between them.

They found that each species' attacked prey differently to what would be expected of spiders living in groups, such as only sending out the number of spiders necessary to take down the prey. For small prey, a small number of spiders and a large number of spiders attacking large prey:

  • The African social velvet spider (Stegodyphus mimosarum) was quite shy, with very few spiders attacking prey, irrespective of its size, slow to attack and rejected a high proportion of prey
  • The Indian cooperative spider (Stegodyphus sarasinorum) attacked prey, irrespective of its size, with large numbers of spiders but more spiders attacked when prey was small
  • While the African Social Spider (Stegodyphus dumicola) preferred medium sized prey, more spiders engaged in the attack of small prey and fewer spiders attacked larger prey

Study lead author Dr Lena Grinsted, Senior Lecturer in Zoology in the School of Biological Sciences at the University of Portsmouth, said: "When spiders become social, they all end up becoming extremely inbred, they start caring for each other's babies, and they hunt and feed together. What's new in this study is that, despite these general similarities, we found there is not just one way of being a social spider. Environmental conditions and competition will have shaped different hunting strategies in different species."

The researchers investigated the number of spiders that engaged in attacking prey, the time it took for the first spiders to attack, and the size of the prey (the study used grasshoppers, locusts and crickets).

In the African social velvet spider and African Social Spider, who live in the same locations, these species show cautious and choosy group hunting approaches, while the Indian cooperative spider has a more opportunistic approach.

Dr Grinsted added: "This indicates that where two different social species share the same habitat, they have evolved their own niches in response to competition between them."

The study, which is published in the Journal of Arachnology, was conducted by researchers from the University of Portsmouth, Lund University (Sweden), Aarhus University (Denmark) and Botswana International University of Science and Technology.

Source: sciencedaily.com

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