Thermoregulation in orb-web spiders: new descriptions of thermoregulatory postures and experiments on the effects of posture and coloration |
| |
Authors: | MICHAEL H. ROBINSON BARBARA C. ROBINSON |
| |
Affiliation: | Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, P.O. Box 2072, Balboa, Canal Zone, Panama |
| |
Abstract: | Ideally, diurnal orb-web spiders should be able to ignore problems of insolation when siting their webs and should be able to operate such webs without the necessity of retiring into shade. Postures that minimize the surface area of the spider exposed to insolation may help to free the spider from the danger of overheating. Such postures are here described for the first time for Argiope argentata and three species of Gasteracantha . Experiments with dead Nephila clavipes show that postures described as thermoregulatory do, in fact, reduce absolute temperatures (and the rate of temperature increase) compared to normal predatory postures. Metalic or other reflectant coloration occurs in many species of diurnal orb-web spiders. These are partly listed herein. Experiments with one such species, Argiope argentata , show that overpainting the silver parts increases both the rate of temperature increase and the absolute temperatures reached when naturally coloured and black-painted spiders are exposed to the same radiant heat sources. It is suggested that these results on the probable thermoregulatory function of metallic coloration can provide insights into the probable habitat distributions of species whose coloration is known but whose ecology is presently unknown. The general question of adaptive coloration in spiders is discussed in the light of these results. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|
|