Stegodyphus dumicola

Summary

Stegodyphus dumicola, commonly known as the African social spider, is a species of spider of the family Eresidae, or the velvet spider family. It is native to Central and southern Africa. This spider is one of three Stegodyphus spiders that lives a social lifestyle (S. lineatus, S. mimosarum, and S. dumicola). This spider has been studied living in large natal colonies (ranging from tens to hundreds of highly related spiders) in large, unkempt webs. Each colony is composed mainly of females, where a minority (forty percent) act as reproducers, and a majority (sixty percent) remain childless and take care of the young. Males live a shorter lifespan, during which they will largely remain in the natal nest. Females are known for extreme allomaternal care, since all females – even unmated virgin ones – will take care of the young until they are eventually consumed by the brood.

African social spider
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Eresidae
Genus: Stegodyphus
Species:
S. dumicola
Binomial name
Stegodyphus dumicola
Pocock, 1898
Synonyms
Stegodyphus dumicola is commonly found in the Namibian Desert

Description edit

 
S. dumicola on its web

Stegodyphus spiders have a tough carapace with white hairs along the body. Males Stegodyphus spiders have dark borders and narrow white bands along the abdomen, while females have dark longitudinal bands along the abdomen.[1] Spiders of this genus vary from total length, typically between 2.3 and 3.5 mm. Like other “velvet spiders” the anterior region of the prosoma is raised and convex sloping to the posterior. This is more prominent in adult males compared to females and is present once the spider has matured past early instars.[2]

Population structure, speciation, and phylogeny edit

Stegodyphus dumicola live in groups with a high female to male sex ratio.[3] Population founding is the responsibility of females; it is when groups of related or unrelated female individuals disperse upon maturation to create a new nest. The secondary sex ratio is 12% males on average. Amongst the females in the colony, roughly 40% will engage in mating, while the other 60% will remain virgins and participate in brood care.[4]

Genetic population structure edit

Although there are high levels of inbreeding and colony isolation in the Stegodyphus dumicola, there is high variation in mitochondrial DNA in spiders of this species. Studies have found four lineages that compose a total of 15 haplotypes. Different lineages had twelve to twenty-nine substitution differences, mainly in the ND1 region (2.65-6.00% substitution rate. Within the same lineage, one to five substitutions were found (1.50-2.50%).[5]

Habitat and distribution edit

Stegodyphus dumicola can be found in Southwestern regions of Africa.[3][6] This spider is frequently found in areas of Namibia except the Namib Desert. They specifically reside in mesic to semi-arid woodlands of the hot and dry thornbush country. In the savanna, the temperature of nests can exceed forty degrees Celsius.[4]

Diet edit

Spiderling edit

Non-reproductive cannibalism edit

When the spiderlings are second stage instars, females will capture prey and regurgitate a nourishing fluid. When spiderlings reach final instars, females sacrifice their bodies for the kin. Spiderlings mount the female's dorsal region and consume her bodily fluids until she passes in an act of matriphagy.[4][7] This phenomenon has been further classified as gerontophagy, because the brood will feed on old females, regardless of whether or not the female was related to the kin.[7]

Spider edit

Predatory feeding edit

Larger spiders are more likely to take part in cooperative prey capture.[8] During capture, many females will engage with the prey at the same time, injecting its digestive juices into the prey through extra-oral digestion. These digestive enzymes break down the prey into a liquid for other spiders to share, or for females to regurgitate to spiderlings.[9]

Webs edit

Construction edit

Within the spider’s social group, all spiders in the group take part in web construction, maintenance, and prey capture.[3] Nests are large web structures composed of a compact combination of silk and nearby branch or desert brush. These nests are built in spiny bush twigs or trees close to the ground at a height of 0.5 to 1.5 meters high.[10] The exterior is layered in a grey fiber tissue (one to two centimeters thick).

Aside from a dense outer layer, the nests consist of a tunnel network system. The interior silk is closely textured and contains tunnels where the spiders mainly occupy. To expand the nest, females will perform local budding of different nests when this female disperses after mating. Budded nests are typically no farther than five meters away from the home nest.[4]

Web type edit

Stegodyphus dumicola are classified as orb-weaving spiders. Compact silk, spongy colony nests are roughly 5 centimetres (1.96850 in) to 30 centimetres (12 in) in diameter and will vary based on the spider colony size. When new females create a new colony, webs will begin as monodomous, where there is a single isolated nest. As more generations begin to occupy the colony, these larger group nests are described as polydomous, where many nests are connected throughout with one web.[8]

Cribellar sheets extend from the nest, where entrances face down and the regions above are blocked off. These sheets have been found as a defense mechanism from predatorial A. steingroeveri attacks.[8]

The nest of the web has been discovered to be detrimental to thermoregulation, where temperatures inside the nest have been found to exceed forty degrees celsius. Relative humidity has been found to be lower compared to the surrounding environment. The nest does not provide protection from bushfire or general dehydrating conditions, but does provide protection from other environmental dangers (wind, hail, sun-related radiation) [10]

Prey capture technique edit

Within the large, webbed nest, several prey-capture regions are interspersed within housing tunnels. Spiders are compelled to retrieve snagged prey upon vibratory cues.[11] The Stegodyphus dumicola have been found to follow a “shy” and a “bold” personality, where shy spiders are latent and do not respond to prey capture stimuli, and bold spiders are active and seek to forage. Smaller spiders tend to have a bold personality.[3][12]

Reproduction and life cycle edit

Lifespan edit

Generations of Stegodyphus dumicola spiders live approximately for one year. Male Stegodyphus dumicola have shorter lifespans compared to females. Males mature faster, and die a few weeks after mating.[13] Namibian female spiders have been found to mature from January to the middle of the summer, produce eggs from February to March, and live until April to June to take care of the brood and later be consumed by the kin. Adult females are the ones who leave to create new colonies.[10] If a female chooses to leave and create a new colony, this was found to occur from January to March.[8]

Mating edit

Spiders do not travel far to mate and will typically mate in the natal colony, leading to high levels of inbreeding.[3] Males will begin to fight over female territory in the breeding season and will compete for females. They will normally mate within the parent colony. If males do emigrate, they join the nests of solitary females.[8] Females will tend to be in control during mating duration and will be selective in mate choice if they mature early.[13] The tail end of the mating season in these spiders is from January to March.[7]

Parental care edit

Within the large colonies, female spiders share maternal care of the brood, regardless of whether or not she is the mother. Roughly 60% of females in the colony remain virgins and engage in extreme allomaternal care. Egg sack maintenance, construction and defense are the responsibility of the females. Females will regurgitate captured prey to second instar brood, and later sacrifice herself in a final act of matriphagy by the time the brood reaches final instar.[4]

Social behavior edit

The Stegodyphus dumicola is one of only twenty to thirty spider species that is considered social. Sociality in spiders is defined as cooperative breeding in spiders that are non-territorial and permanently social.[14] Although the Stegodyphus dumicola, mainly live-in groups, they have also been found to live solitarily.[8] The Stegodyphus dumicola groups range from a few individuals to a few hundred spiders. They colonize, construct, and maintain the same web. They cooperate in childcare and gathering prey. Spiders will tend to live in the same colony they were born in, leading to a group that is made of several generations of related individuals.[10] Foraging behavior has been observed to be equally divided amongst members of the colony.[3]

Group foraging behavior varies between colonies of different size and composition. It is more likely that smaller colonies will initiate attack early and begin an attack more quickly than larger colonies. If a group has a wide range in spider behavior or boldness level personality types, the group was found to initiate a response more quickly to prey. If a group was made of spiders that were morphologically diverse (varying prosoma width), they also mounted a faster attack.[3]

The task differentiation behavior is similar to Stegodyphus sarasinorum with likelihood of attack on prey and modulation of foraging behavior.

Enemies edit

Predators edit

 
A crimson-breasted shrike feeding on a S. dumicola nest

Predators of this spider include Anoplolespsis steingroeveri (arboreal pugnacious ant), araneophagous spiders, insectivorous birds, and Pseudopompilus funereus (Pomplid Wasps).

The arboreal pugnacious ant (Anoplolespsis steingroeveri) and Stegodyphus dumicola inhabit the same trees and are commonly found together. When these ants attack, they gather in hundreds and thousands to invade for consecutive days, up to multiple times per year. The ants bite females to kill the spiders, dismember the remains, and remove spider eggs. These events have been found to be extremely lethal to spider colonies. When under attack, the spiders will either weave more cribellate silk sheets to stop a swarm or gather egg cocoons and abandon the current nest.[8]

Other predators of Stegodyphus dumicola include several other spider species (Clubionidae, Gnaphosidae, Nephila senegalensis, Salticidae, Heteropodidae, Thomisidae). Most araneophagous spiders will enter the nests, however Nephila senegalensis would capture spiders by building a web onto the S. dumicola’s nest and hunting spiders that entered its web. There is little evidence to suggest the spiders fight back against these other spiders. S. dumicola was found to have a passive relationship with Clubionidae, Thomisidae, and Salticidae, attracted to Nephila senegalensis, and completely defenseless to Heteropodidae and Gnaphosidae . Solitary spiders were found to be captured by other spiders at a higher frequency compared to social variants.[8]

Diseases edit

The Stegodyphus dumicola commonly falls to widespread fungal infection. Larger, spongey nests are susceptible of fungus propagation because they tend to allow for a moist environment. If the nest is able to dry in the sunlight, fungal growth would cease. However, if the nest maintained a moist environment for up to one to two days, fungal infection could decimate the nest.[8]

Physiology edit

Locomotion edit

Ballooning edit

Sexually mature female Stegodyphus dumicola have been witnessed to balloon as a method of dispersion to reproduce. Females will eject from ten to hundreds of strings in a triangle shape (approximately one meter large, length and width) to gain liftoff. Males have not been observed to display this behavior.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ Lehtinen, Pekka (1967), "Classification of the Cribellate spiders and some allied families, with notes on the evolution of the suborder Araneomorpha", Annales Zoologici Fennici, 4: 199–468
  2. ^ Kraus, O.; Kraus, M. (1989), "The genus Stegodyphus (Arachnida, Araneae). Sibling species, species groups, and parallel origin of social living", Verhandlungen des Naturwissenschaftlichen Vereins in Hamburg (NF), 30: 151=254
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Wright, C. M.; Keiser, C. N.; Pruitt, J.N. (2015), "Personality and morphology shape task participation, collective foraging and escape behaviour in the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola", Animal Behaviour, 105: 47–54, doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.04.001, S2CID 53165346
  4. ^ a b c d e Junghanns, A; Holm, C; Schou, M.F.; Sørensen, A.B.; Uhl, G; Bilde, T. (2017), "Extreme allomaternal care and unequal task participation by unmated females in a cooperatively breeding spider", Animal Behaviour, 132: 101–107, doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2017.08.006, S2CID 53166858
  5. ^ Johannesen, J; Hennig, A; Schneider, J.M. (2002), "Mitochondrial DNA distributions indicate colony propagation by single matri-lineages in the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola (Eresidae).", Biological Journal of the Linnean Society, 76 (4): 591–600, doi:10.1046/j.1095-8312.2002.00082.x
  6. ^ Henschel, J (1992), "Is solitary life an alternative for the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola?", Journal of the Namibia Scientific Society, 43: 71–79
  7. ^ a b c Seibt, U.; Wickler, W. (1987), "Gerontophagy versus cannibalism in the social spiders Stegodyphus mimosarum Pavesi and Stegodyphus dumicola Pocock", Animal Behaviour, 35 (6): 1903–1905, doi:10.1016/S0003-3472(87)80087-8, S2CID 54341180
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Henschel, J. R. (1998), "Predation on social and solitary individuals of the spider Stegodyphus dumicola (Araneae, Eresidae)", Journal of Arachnology, 26 (1): 61–69
  9. ^ Salomon, M.; Mayntz, D.; Lubin, Y. (2008), "Colony nutrition skews reproduction in a social spider", Behavioral Ecology, 19 (3): 605–611, doi:10.1093/beheco/arn008, hdl:10.1093/beheco/arn008
  10. ^ a b c d Seibt, U.; Wickler, W. (1990), "The protective function of the compact silk nest of social Stegodyphus spiders", Oecologia, 82 (3): 317–321, doi:10.1007/BF00317477, PMID 28312705, S2CID 24361297
  11. ^ Wright, C. M.; Keiser, C.N.; Pruitt, J.N. (2015), "Personality and morphology shape task participation, collective foraging and escape behaviour in the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola", Animal Behaviour, 105: 47–54, doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2015.04.001, S2CID 53165346
  12. ^ Smith, D.R.; Su, Y.; Berger-Tal, R; Lubin, Y (2016), "Population genetic evidence for sex‐specific dispersal in an inbred social spider", Ecology and Evolution, 6 (15): 5479–5490, doi:10.1002/ece3.2200, PMC 4984519, PMID 27551398
  13. ^ a b Henschel, J. R.; Lubin, Y.D.; Schneider, J. (1995), "Sexual competition in an inbreeding social spider, Stegodyphus dumicola (Araneae: Eresidae)", Insectes Sociaux, 42 (4): 419–426, doi:10.1007/BF01242170, S2CID 23057120
  14. ^ Johannessen, J.; Lubin, Y.; Smith, D.R.; Bilde, T; Schneider, J.M (2007), "The age and evolution of sociality in Stegodyphus spiders: A molecular phylogenetic perspective", Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 274(1607), 231–237. (1607): 231–237, doi:10.1098/rspb.2006.3699, PMC 1685853, PMID 17148252
  15. ^ Schneider, J. M.; Roos, J.; Henschel, J.R (2001), "Dispersal of Stegodyphus Dumicola (Araneae, Eresidae): They do Balloon After All!", The Journal of Arachnology, 29 (1): 114–116, doi:10.1636/0161-8202(2001)029[0114:DOSDAE]2.0.CO;2, S2CID 4707752