REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

A spider less than 2 centimetres long builds webs that span rivers

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Friday, November 4, 2011 04:07
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Thursday, November 3, 2011 8:40 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Now THAT's impressive! We've got orb-weaver spiders all around here; one has taken up residence along the front wall of the house. Given I water some plants right under where he puts up his webs, I've found it interesting to see what he does every day. He's built some damned big webs--one reaching all the way over to my motorcycle handlebar, but nothing like THIS! Apparently this gal is an orb weaver of one subspecies or another, from what I saw of her web in the video and what the article says. Truly a great feat of engineering!
Quote:

The biggest spider web in the world

Species: Caerostris darwini
Habitat: Madagascar, alarming arachnophobes and mayflies in equal measure



The spider attaches a line of silk to the tree branch she is standing on, by the side of a river, and bungee-jumps into space. Dangling in mid-air, she begins spewing out silk. And more silk. And still more silk.

Eventually she has released more than 25 metres of continuous strands, which drift away downwind, across the river. Suddenly she stops, and begins reeling the line back in. It pulls taut. Success! The other end has tangled itself in a bush on the far bank.

This is the first step in the construction of the world's biggest spider web, which will hang above a tropical river. Perched in the centre of her vast web, the Darwin's bark spider can feast on huge numbers of insects after they emerge from the water.

Silk architect
The Darwin's bark spider was discovered in Madagascar only last year, by Matjaž Kuntner of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Ljubljana and Ingi Agnarsson of the University of Puerto Rico in San Juan. With Kuntner's colleague Matjaž Gregoric and Todd Blackledge of the University of Akron in Ohio, they have carried out more field studies to find out how the spiders build their webs and what they are for.

The Darwin's bark has a built-in advantage. Its silk is the toughest of any spider, which is particularly remarkable as spider silks are tough anyway, and stronger than many artificial substances.

The river-spanning lines of silk are the longest section of the web. The spider's method of building them – trailing silk into the open air and hoping for the best – is similar to the common spider trick of "ballooning". Spiders who want to travel long distances release long strands of silk that act like kites and pull the spiders into the air. Ballooning is found in most species of spider, suggesting it has an ancient evolutionary origin – the bridging lines may have developed from it.

Once the bridging line is in place, the spider walks out along it and reinforces both ends. Then she adds one vertical thread beneath the bridging line, forming a "T" shape. This vertical thread becomes the basis for the web proper, a classic orb web that can have an area of 2.7 square metres.

Web of mystery
So what does this huge net catch? Kuntner and colleagues staked out 46 webs and found that most of the prey was small insects like beetles, damselflies, dragonflies and wasps.

In a separate paper, Blackledge has shown that female orb-web spiders rely on occasionally capturing exceptionally big animals. These supply a huge amount of food in one go, so the spiders have plenty of energy to devote to laying eggs.

There was no sign of the Darwin's bark spiders catching big game, though. The researchers tested what the webs could catch in the most direct way possible: by lobbing different prey animals at them from half a metre away. Nothing bigger than a dragonfly got stuck: larger insects and frogs all got clean away.

It may be that the spiders get big meals by catching insects like mayflies in bulk when they emerge from the river. The alternative is that the team just didn't watch them for long enough to see them catch anything big. "We aren't yet sure if C. darwini is a really neat exception to most orb spiders, or if we simply don't know enough about what they eat," Blackledge says. Video at http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn21124-zoologger-the-biggest-spid
er-web-in-the-world.html


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Thursday, November 3, 2011 9:27 AM

FREMDFIRMA



EeeeYUCK.

My usual work shifts occur during that period of still air when spiders spin their web for the day, which means all night long I am running into the bloody, blasted things and wind up having to scrape them off my glasses and comb them outta my hair - and if that weren't bad enough you sometimes get the spider too, who is kinda pissed off about having his house wrecked up and bites you in retaliation, which is no fun at all when they have full venom sacs since they haven't used any yet, ouch.

That said, provided I ain't running into them, some of the webs have a natural beauty I find quite remarkable, and spiders as a rule are quite industrious little suckers.

Most of the large web weavers ain't too threatening, it's the funnel web bastards which are hateful and downright mean cause they're ambush hunters, stronger than normal spiders and have much nastier venom since they depend on that alone instead of the web to disable their prey, you wanna go AROUND them suckers, you do.

Portia spiders are always fun to watch, in a dark, demented sorta way - that "Oh crap!" reaction of it's victim when it realizes that the "prey" is in fact the predator is disturbingly hilarious.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Thursday, November 3, 2011 11:15 AM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


That's a cool story Niki, I love hearing about animals that I didn't know about. Plus its cool that its newly found.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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Friday, November 4, 2011 4:07 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Yeah, Frem, it's the same for me during "spider season" when I go out to the Outback to go to bed at night. When it gets really bad I take a magazine with me and hold it up in front of my face. Other than that, we get along pretty good--never had one in bed with me and I leave them alone. They always move on after the season. But yeah, the times I've run into them have been yucky!



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