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Leucauge mariana

Leucauge mariana is a long-jawed orb weaver spider, native to Central America and South America. Its web building and sexual behavior have been studied extensively. Males perform several kinds of courtship behavior to induce females to copulate and to use their sperm.

Leucauge mariana
A lateral view of a mature female Leucauge mariana spider at the hub of her approximately horizontal web
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Tetragnathidae
Genus: Leucauge
Species:
L. mariana
Binomial name
Leucauge mariana
Taczanowski, 1881

A particularly unusual feature of sex in L. mariana is the formation of mating plugs during copulation. These masses sometimes block the access of subsequent males to the female’s genitalia and can prevent copulations. Unlike other species, L. mariana forms the mating plug from materials contributed by both the female and the male; the male alone cannot make a functional plug. Most mating plugs in other animals are typically viewed as a male tactic used to increase his chances of paternity, without participation of the female. Female participation in creating a mating plugs, and her presumed benefit from them, have led to multiple studies of sexual selection on the sexual behavior of L. mariana.

A second special feature of L. mariana is the possible relation between the undiminished behavioral capabilities of the tiny spiderlings that have only recently emerged from the egg sac; design modifications of the spiderling’s nervous system (greater relative brain size and reduced neuron size) result in it having similar estimated numbers of neurons to those of adults. This may explain the lack of behavioral deficits in web construction by the spiderlings compared with adults.

Description

 
A dorsal view of a mature female L. mariana spider at the hub of her approximately horizontal orb, seen from below

The sides and ventral surface of the abdomen have complex array of green, yellow, black, white and red markings; the abdomen’s dorsal surface, in contrast, is silvery white with dark streaks. The legs are mostly green. Predators and prey looking at the spider from above while it rests at the hub of its more or less horizontal web would see the complex color patterns on its ventral surface; these colors may help camouflage the spider. On the other hand, predators and prey looking up at the spider from below would see the silvery white pattern, which may also provide camouflage against clouds and the bright sky. The red markings may also serve as a warning to possible predators, as L. mariana emit a weak repugnant odor that can be sensed when a spider is held in the fingers very close to the nose.[1]

An early instar spiderling has a relatively large brains which displaces other organs in its cephalothorax, and also fills an outward bulge in the lower wall of the cephalothorax. This bulge gradually disappears as spiders grow to their adult size.[2] Although the absolute size of the brain of an early instar L. mariana is much smaller than that of an adult, the greater relative size of its brain and the sharp reduction in the diameters of its neurons result in spiderlings and adults having similar numbers of neurons; this similarity may be related to the lack of behavioral deficits in the web construction behavior when spiderlings are compared with adults.[1]

Taxonomy

L. mariana belongs to the family  Tetragnathidae , also known as long-jawed orb weavers. The first  Leucauge specimens were discovered by Charles Darwin in 1832 near the Guandu River (Rio de Janeiro) and the genus was originally described  by Adam White in 1841. The genus is currently being revised, as the type specimen of the genus was lost and Leucauge subsequently became a “dumping ground genus” for species with unclear affinities. Several aspects of the sexual behavior, including sexual cannibalism by the female, frequency of mating plug formation, and correlations between male behavior with plug formation differed in comparisons of specimens of L. mariana from Costa Rica with others from Colombia; it is thus not certain they are the same species. The species was named by Taczanowski in 1881.[3]

Habitat

Leucauge mariana spiders are found from Mexico to Argentina.[3] In the Valle Central in Costa Rica the spiders are very common among weeds in early secondary growth and along wooded streams. Before the arrival of humans, secondary vegetation of this sort grew near rivers, landslides and tree-fall gaps.[4][5] The population densities in Costa Rica are much greater late in the rainy season and the beginning of the early dry season, but mature individuals are present year-round. Males are often found on either mature females' webs or on the webs of penultimate females.[6]

Life cycle and reproduction

Field-caught males and females can live for a week or longer in captivity without additional food if they are kept in a humid environment. Mature females in the field have been observed to live several weeks. It is believed that females lay multiple clutches of eggs, but this has not been confirmed in nature. In Mexico females laid eggs at sheltered sites (e.g. under leaves) in the leaf litter.[6]

Mating

L. mariana has specific pre-copulatory and post-copulatory rituals. Males cannot force females to mate because the female must seize and hold the male’s chelicerae in hers, and then bend her abdomen toward the male before genital contact can occur. Females are also generally larger than males.  Males often wait in the web of a penultimate female spider for her to molt to maturity. Very soon after the female emerges from her old cuticle, the male mates with her. Male-male fights occur on the webs of both mature and penultimate females. After preliminary threats by jerking the web, males spread their front legs as they come together, probably measuring each other’s size. Larger males chase smaller rivals off the web; if the two males are evenly matched in size, they grapple briefly before one of them leaves. Typically the winner cuts the line that the loser leaves behind, thus breaking his contact with the female’s web.[6]

Female/male interactions

Courting

The male Leucauge mariana uses multiple methods to court the female. These include jerks, rocking, abdomen bobbing, palp rubbing, twanging and tapping lines, and tapping the female. These behaviors are often repeated if the female does not respond to the male by turning to face toward him and adopting a receptive posture that includes facing somewhat downward, repeatedly opening and closing her chelicerae, and finally, bend her abdomen upward. The female sometimes ignores male courtship behavior, and the male eventually leaves if he is not accepted.[6][7][8]

Copulation

Cheliceral clasping occurs just before copulation begins. The females spreads her chelicerae and opens her fangs as the male approaches, then closes her fangs to clasp the basal segment of the male's chelicerae; her chelicerae hook onto ledges on this segment of the male's chelicera; the male’s fangs remain closed.  The chelicerae remain clasped throughout copulation and the female can interrupt copulation by  breaking off the clasp.[7] During copulation males performed leg tapping, abdomen bobbing and rocking behaviors - the same behaviors seen in pre-copulatory sequences. The male also performs bursts of rhythmic leg pushes with his front legs (I-II) against the front legs of the female. Bursts of male pushing occurred when the basal heamtodocha of the palp was inflated. Genital coupling occurred when the male extended one of his pedipalps to make contact with the female's abdomen and attempts to insert it into her epigynum.[6] The male's palpal insertions were of two types: long insertions lasted for about a minute; short insertions on the order of a second. Long insertions occurred more often during early stages of copulation, but order varied. Short insertions occurred in bursts, with each insertion lasting a second or two. Short insertions occurred more often toward the end of copulation, but order varied. After a burst of short insertions the male withdrew his palp and then extended his other palp to contact the female’s genitalia. Long insertions were observed more when a male copulated with a virgin female; they were rare in matings with non-virgin females.[8] In some attempted insertions the male’s palp did not engage properly with the epigynum (“flubs”). During insertions inflatable sacs in the pedipalp (the hematodochae) inflate and deflate, probably locking the palp to the female’s epigynum and moving the tip of the male’s embolus (the sperm transfer organ) deeper into the female. There are multiple inflation and deflation cycles during each long insertion, while there is only a single inflation and deflation during each short insertion. Insemination occurs early during copulation  when the sperm is transferred by the embolus into chamber I of the female’s spermatheca. Sperm is then decapsulated and gradually moves deeper into the female, into chamber II and III.[6]

Mate plugging

Deposition of a mating plug depends on both the male and the female in L. mariana. The substances required for mating plugs come from both males and females. Males deposit a sticky, toothpaste-like white substance on the female epigynum during short insertions, but it often sticks to the male’s palp and is removed during insertions.[8] For a mating plug form the female must add a liquid that combines with the male’s material to create a smooth-surfaced mass that, when it hardens, adheres tightly to the epigynum and blocks the entrance to the insemination duct.[9] Formation of mating plugs is presumably a result of sexual selection. Mating plugs are sometimes removed by a subsequent male with his conductor hook, but some males failed in attempts to remove them. Hypotheses to explain plug formation include protecting the male’s sperm from dilution by the sperm of subsequent mates (an advantage for the male), and allowing the female to control which male that mates with her will sire her offspring.[6]

Post-copulation

Sexual cannibalism was observed in Colombian L. mariana much more frequently than in Costa Rican L. mariana. Decreased rates of hematodocal inflations (and decreased sperm count) positively correlated with increased possibility of the female attempting to cannibalize the male. Female cannibalism only occurred when the male was attempting to mate. Female choice of sexually successful males was associated with involved strength of cheliceral clasping, duration of palpal insertion, and sperm count (measured through hematodocal inflation rates).[9][10]

Re-mating

Female L. mariana spiders often mate with more than one male, and the traits of the female’s first mate affect the likelihood that she accepts or rejects courtship from subsequent males.[11] If during the first copulation the male made fewer short insertion and a higher number of flubs, the female was more likely to accept mating with a second mate. Because a majority of sperm transfer occurs during long insertions, reduced number of short insertions may not affect sperm count.[8]

Social behavior

Leucauge mariana spiders are generally solitary spiders for most of the year. During the dry season, however, adults sometimes form aggregations in which their orb webs are built on shared tangles of support silk strands.[5]

Adult sociality

Adult males, are unable to build orbs themselves, but sometime evict nearly mature individuals (presumably both males and females) from their webs and use them for prey capture.[6]

Web

 
A ventral view of a mature female L. mariana in her web

Web type

Compared to some other orb-weavers, the horizontal webs of L. mariana are more open meshed, weaker and have small amounts of sticky material on the sticky spiral lines.[12]

Construction behavior and cues

Leucauge mariana build their orb webs of both non-sticky silk and wet sticky silk. Often a spider builds several orbs each day; the first 1 to 2 hours before dawn, another around noon, and still another early in the evening. Their orbs are relatively flimsy and are often attached to objects that move in the wind (e.g., plant leaves), and often accumulate damage relatively rapidly.

Spiders find websites by exploring their surroundings, and often make long, airborne lines to travel from previous websites. As in other orb-weavers, a preliminary period of exploration of a site eventually ends when  the spider establishes a site where three or more lines intersect; this will be the point of reference for the hub. Frame, anchor line and radii construction are the next steps in web construction.[13][14] A radius is constructed as part of the construction of each frame, but other details of frame construction vary.[15] L. mariana often reuse the frame lines of previous webs when building a new orb at the same site.[4]  Typically several more radii are built after the last frame is in place, and then hub loop construction begins after the last radius (or occasionally after the penultimate radius) is in place. Hub construction begins when the spider grasps a line in the center of the hub with one leg III and begins to rotate slowly, fastening adjacent radii to each other, one after another. This leg III is not moved during hub construction, and is apparently used to measure the distance at which each hub spiral attachment should be made. Hub construction ends abruptly, and the spider moves farther away from the hub and begins to build the “temporary spiral”; this line continues  going outward toward the edge of the web. The temporary spiral ends short of the web’s edge, and after a pause of a few seconds, the spider begins laying a second sticky, spiral working inward. She removes the previous, temporary spiral (hence its name) as she moves inward. As is typical of orb webs, the only sticky silk in the orb is the sticky spiral.[13][14][15]

Experiments regarding construction

Experiments and measurements of webs have demonstrated several surprising mental abilities in L. mariana.[16] When she begins an orb, a spider can adjust several aspects of the design of an orb (including the total area, the number of radii, and the spaces between sticky and non-sticky spiral lines) to the amount of sticky silk that she has available in her silk glands. She also adjusts the spaces between spiral lines while she is building on the basis of the location of previous loops of sticky line, memories of distances between lines that she encountered a few seconds previously, the distance from the hub, and the direction of gravity.[17] Less complete data suggest that the spider may also remember the locations of alterations she encountered previously while she is circling the web laying the sticky spiral, even after having circled 360o. She can distinguish this alteration from a second alteration that she encounters after having circled only 270o. Again, these feats are accomplished even though the spider cannot see the lines in her web and must rely on touch to sense them. Learning has little or no role in orb construction, as tiny spiderlings that are newly emerged from the egg sac build orbs with equally precise spacing between lines and make equally elaborate adjustments to the environment such as limited spaces in which to build their orbs.[18]

Prey capture techniques

Perhaps due to the weakness of their webs, female L. mariana spiders are spectacularly fast hunters. The female on her web can make quick and accurate turns towards vibrations caused by prey colliding with the web. Spiders waiting at the hub responded (with no preliminary warning) to the impact of a prey on her web by turning up to greater than 90o, locating new lines to grasp for all eight legs, determining the location of the prey, and ran 4-5 body lengths to attack, all in as little as 0.21s. The turns at the hub were precise: the spider turned to hold the radius closest to the prey with one front leg in 90% of these rapid turns. Vibrations produced by the prey’s impact sensed by the legs were probably used to achieve this precise orientation. The rear legs (III and IV) supported most of the spider’s weight and supplied the motive force during the turn; the spider used legs I and II to quickly find and grasp the radii. These feats are especially impressive since the spiders are unable to see the lines in their webs; the way they orient, using their long front legs to find lines, can be likened to a blind person with a cane would move while walking on a sparse network of aerial lines.[12][16]

References

  1. ^ a b Eberhard, William G (2007-09-07). "Miniaturized orb-weaving spiders: behavioural precision is not limited by small size". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 274 (1622): 2203–2209. doi:10.1098/rspb.2007.0675. PMC 2706203. PMID 17609181.
  2. ^ "Small Spiders Have Big Brains That Spill Into Their Legs". National Geographic News. 2011-12-20. Retrieved 2020-11-03.
  3. ^ a b "Leucauge mariana (Taczanowski, 1881)". www.gbif.org. Retrieved 2020-10-20.
  4. ^ a b Eberhard, William G. (1988). "Behavioral Flexibility in Orb Web Construction: Effects of Supplies in Different Silk Glands and Spider Size and Weight". The Journal of Arachnology. 16 (3): 295–302. ISSN 0161-8202. JSTOR 3705916.
  5. ^ a b Salomon, Maxence; Sponarski, Carly; Larocque, Allen; Avilés, Leticia (2012). "Social organization of the colonial spider Leucauge sp. in the Neotropics: vertical stratification within colonies". Journal of Arachnology. 38 (3): 446–451. doi:10.1636/Hi09-99.1. ISSN 0161-8202. S2CID 54531040.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Aisenberg, Anita; Barrantes, Gilbert; Eberhard, William G. (2015), "Post-copulatory Sexual Selection in Two Tropical Orb-weaving Leucauge Spiders", Cryptic Female Choice in Arthropods, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 79–108, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-17894-3_4, ISBN 978-3-319-17893-6, retrieved 2020-10-17
  7. ^ a b Aisenberg, Anita; Barrantes, Gilbert; Eberhard, William G. (February 2015). "Hairy kisses: tactile cheliceral courtship affects female mating decisions in Leucauge mariana (Araneae, Tetragnathidae)". Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. 69 (2): 313–323. doi:10.1007/s00265-014-1844-2. hdl:10669/79044. ISSN 0340-5443. S2CID 18718957.
  8. ^ a b c d Eberhard, William G.; Huber, Bernhard A. (1998). "Courtship, Copulation, and Sperm Transfer in Leucauge mariana (Araneae, Tetragnathidae) with Implications for Higher Classification". The Journal of Arachnology. 26 (3): 342–368. ISSN 0161-8202. JSTOR 3706241.
  9. ^ a b Hernández, Linda; Aisenberg, Anita; Molina, Jorge (January 2018). Hebets, E. (ed.). "Mating plugs and sexual cannibalism in the Colombian orb-web spider Leucauge mariana". Ethology. 124 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1111/eth.12697.
  10. ^ Hernández, Linda; Molina, Jorge; Aisenberg, Anita (2019-09-16). "Shape of male palpal hook affects female sexual cannibalism in Leucauge mariana (Araneae: Tetragnathidae)". The Journal of Arachnology. 47 (2): 280. doi:10.1636/joa-s-18-058. ISSN 0161-8202. S2CID 202579389.
  11. ^ Aisenberg, Anita (December 2009). "Male Performance and Body Size Affect Female Re-Mating Occurrence in the Orb-Web SpiderLeucauge mariana(Araneae, Tetragnathidae)". Ethology. 115 (12): 1127–1136. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2009.01701.x. ISSN 0179-1613.
  12. ^ a b Briceño, R. D.; Eberhard, W. G. (2011). "The hub as a launching platform: rapid movements of the spider Leucauge mariana (Araneae: Tetragnathidae) as it turns to attack prey". The Journal of Arachnology. 39 (1): 102–112. doi:10.1636/Hi10-76.1. ISSN 0161-8202. JSTOR 23048786. S2CID 43984275.
  13. ^ a b Eberhard, William G. (1990). "Early Stages of Orb Construction by Philoponella Vicina, Leucauge Mariana, and Nephila Clavipes (Araneae, Uloboridae and Tetragnathidae), and Their Phylogenetic Implications". The Journal of Arachnology. 18 (2): 205–234. ISSN 0161-8202. JSTOR 3705838.
  14. ^ a b Eberhard, William G. (1987). "Hub construction by Leucauge mariana (Araneae, Araneidae)" (PDF). Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society. 7: 128–132.
  15. ^ a b Eberhard, William G. (June 1987). "Effects of gravity on temporary spiral construction byLeucauge mariana (Araneae: Araneidae)". Journal of Ethology. 5 (1): 29–36. doi:10.1007/bf02347892. ISSN 0289-0771. S2CID 23742076.
  16. ^ a b Eberhard, William G. (2020-07-02). "Relation between sexual allometry and function in the sawfly Leseha vespa (Hymenoptera Tenthredinidae)". Ethology Ecology & Evolution. 33: 1–14. doi:10.1080/03949370.2020.1777209. ISSN 0394-9370. S2CID 225612793.
  17. ^ Eberhard, William G.; Hesselberg, Thomas (2012). "Cues that Spiders (Araneae: Araneidae, Tetragnathidae) Use to Build Orbs: Lapses in Attention to One Set of Cues because of Dissonance with Others?". Ethology. 118 (7): 610–620. doi:10.1111/j.1439-0310.2012.02048.x. ISSN 1439-0310.
  18. ^ Quesada, Rosannette; Triana, Emilia; Vargas, Gloria; Douglass, John K.; Seid, Marc A.; Niven, Jeremy E.; Eberhard, William G.; Wcislo, William T. (2011-11-01). "The allometry of CNS size and consequences of miniaturization in orb-weaving and cleptoparasitic spiders". Arthropod Structure & Development. 40 (6): 521–529. doi:10.1016/j.asd.2011.07.002. ISSN 1467-8039. PMID 22036838.

leucauge, mariana, long, jawed, weaver, spider, native, central, america, south, america, building, sexual, behavior, have, been, studied, extensively, males, perform, several, kinds, courtship, behavior, induce, females, copulate, their, sperm, lateral, view,. Leucauge mariana is a long jawed orb weaver spider native to Central America and South America Its web building and sexual behavior have been studied extensively Males perform several kinds of courtship behavior to induce females to copulate and to use their sperm Leucauge marianaA lateral view of a mature female Leucauge mariana spider at the hub of her approximately horizontal webScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaSubphylum ChelicerataClass ArachnidaOrder AraneaeInfraorder AraneomorphaeFamily TetragnathidaeGenus LeucaugeSpecies L marianaBinomial nameLeucauge marianaTaczanowski 1881A particularly unusual feature of sex in L mariana is the formation of mating plugs during copulation These masses sometimes block the access of subsequent males to the female s genitalia and can prevent copulations Unlike other species L mariana forms the mating plug from materials contributed by both the female and the male the male alone cannot make a functional plug Most mating plugs in other animals are typically viewed as a male tactic used to increase his chances of paternity without participation of the female Female participation in creating a mating plugs and her presumed benefit from them have led to multiple studies of sexual selection on the sexual behavior of L mariana A second special feature of L mariana is the possible relation between the undiminished behavioral capabilities of the tiny spiderlings that have only recently emerged from the egg sac design modifications of the spiderling s nervous system greater relative brain size and reduced neuron size result in it having similar estimated numbers of neurons to those of adults This may explain the lack of behavioral deficits in web construction by the spiderlings compared with adults Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Habitat 4 Life cycle and reproduction 5 Mating 5 1 Female male interactions 5 1 1 Copulation 5 1 2 Mate plugging 5 2 Post copulation 5 3 Re mating 6 Social behavior 6 1 Adult sociality 7 Web 7 1 Web type 7 2 Construction behavior and cues 7 2 1 Experiments regarding construction 7 3 Prey capture techniques 8 ReferencesDescription Edit A dorsal view of a mature female L mariana spider at the hub of her approximately horizontal orb seen from below The sides and ventral surface of the abdomen have complex array of green yellow black white and red markings the abdomen s dorsal surface in contrast is silvery white with dark streaks The legs are mostly green Predators and prey looking at the spider from above while it rests at the hub of its more or less horizontal web would see the complex color patterns on its ventral surface these colors may help camouflage the spider On the other hand predators and prey looking up at the spider from below would see the silvery white pattern which may also provide camouflage against clouds and the bright sky The red markings may also serve as a warning to possible predators as L mariana emit a weak repugnant odor that can be sensed when a spider is held in the fingers very close to the nose 1 An early instar spiderling has a relatively large brains which displaces other organs in its cephalothorax and also fills an outward bulge in the lower wall of the cephalothorax This bulge gradually disappears as spiders grow to their adult size 2 Although the absolute size of the brain of an early instar L mariana is much smaller than that of an adult the greater relative size of its brain and the sharp reduction in the diameters of its neurons result in spiderlings and adults having similar numbers of neurons this similarity may be related to the lack of behavioral deficits in the web construction behavior when spiderlings are compared with adults 1 Taxonomy EditL mariana belongs to the family Tetragnathidae also known as long jawed orb weavers The first Leucauge specimens were discovered by Charles Darwin in 1832 near the Guandu River Rio de Janeiro and the genus was originally described by Adam White in 1841 The genus is currently being revised as the type specimen of the genus was lost and Leucauge subsequently became a dumping ground genus for species with unclear affinities Several aspects of the sexual behavior including sexual cannibalism by the female frequency of mating plug formation and correlations between male behavior with plug formation differed in comparisons of specimens of L mariana from Costa Rica with others from Colombia it is thus not certain they are the same species The species was named by Taczanowski in 1881 3 Habitat EditLeucauge mariana spiders are found from Mexico to Argentina 3 In the Valle Central in Costa Rica the spiders are very common among weeds in early secondary growth and along wooded streams Before the arrival of humans secondary vegetation of this sort grew near rivers landslides and tree fall gaps 4 5 The population densities in Costa Rica are much greater late in the rainy season and the beginning of the early dry season but mature individuals are present year round Males are often found on either mature females webs or on the webs of penultimate females 6 Life cycle and reproduction EditField caught males and females can live for a week or longer in captivity without additional food if they are kept in a humid environment Mature females in the field have been observed to live several weeks It is believed that females lay multiple clutches of eggs but this has not been confirmed in nature In Mexico females laid eggs at sheltered sites e g under leaves in the leaf litter 6 Mating EditL mariana has specific pre copulatory and post copulatory rituals Males cannot force females to mate because the female must seize and hold the male s chelicerae in hers and then bend her abdomen toward the male before genital contact can occur Females are also generally larger than males Males often wait in the web of a penultimate female spider for her to molt to maturity Very soon after the female emerges from her old cuticle the male mates with her Male male fights occur on the webs of both mature and penultimate females After preliminary threats by jerking the web males spread their front legs as they come together probably measuring each other s size Larger males chase smaller rivals off the web if the two males are evenly matched in size they grapple briefly before one of them leaves Typically the winner cuts the line that the loser leaves behind thus breaking his contact with the female s web 6 Female male interactions Edit CourtingThe male Leucauge mariana uses multiple methods to court the female These include jerks rocking abdomen bobbing palp rubbing twanging and tapping lines and tapping the female These behaviors are often repeated if the female does not respond to the male by turning to face toward him and adopting a receptive posture that includes facing somewhat downward repeatedly opening and closing her chelicerae and finally bend her abdomen upward The female sometimes ignores male courtship behavior and the male eventually leaves if he is not accepted 6 7 8 Copulation Edit Cheliceral clasping occurs just before copulation begins The females spreads her chelicerae and opens her fangs as the male approaches then closes her fangs to clasp the basal segment of the male s chelicerae her chelicerae hook onto ledges on this segment of the male s chelicera the male s fangs remain closed The chelicerae remain clasped throughout copulation and the female can interrupt copulation by breaking off the clasp 7 During copulation males performed leg tapping abdomen bobbing and rocking behaviors the same behaviors seen in pre copulatory sequences The male also performs bursts of rhythmic leg pushes with his front legs I II against the front legs of the female Bursts of male pushing occurred when the basal heamtodocha of the palp was inflated Genital coupling occurred when the male extended one of his pedipalps to make contact with the female s abdomen and attempts to insert it into her epigynum 6 The male s palpal insertions were of two types long insertions lasted for about a minute short insertions on the order of a second Long insertions occurred more often during early stages of copulation but order varied Short insertions occurred in bursts with each insertion lasting a second or two Short insertions occurred more often toward the end of copulation but order varied After a burst of short insertions the male withdrew his palp and then extended his other palp to contact the female s genitalia Long insertions were observed more when a male copulated with a virgin female they were rare in matings with non virgin females 8 In some attempted insertions the male s palp did not engage properly with the epigynum flubs During insertions inflatable sacs in the pedipalp the hematodochae inflate and deflate probably locking the palp to the female s epigynum and moving the tip of the male s embolus the sperm transfer organ deeper into the female There are multiple inflation and deflation cycles during each long insertion while there is only a single inflation and deflation during each short insertion Insemination occurs early during copulation when the sperm is transferred by the embolus into chamber I of the female s spermatheca Sperm is then decapsulated and gradually moves deeper into the female into chamber II and III 6 Mate plugging Edit Deposition of a mating plug depends on both the male and the female in L mariana The substances required for mating plugs come from both males and females Males deposit a sticky toothpaste like white substance on the female epigynum during short insertions but it often sticks to the male s palp and is removed during insertions 8 For a mating plug form the female must add a liquid that combines with the male s material to create a smooth surfaced mass that when it hardens adheres tightly to the epigynum and blocks the entrance to the insemination duct 9 Formation of mating plugs is presumably a result of sexual selection Mating plugs are sometimes removed by a subsequent male with his conductor hook but some males failed in attempts to remove them Hypotheses to explain plug formation include protecting the male s sperm from dilution by the sperm of subsequent mates an advantage for the male and allowing the female to control which male that mates with her will sire her offspring 6 Post copulation Edit Sexual cannibalism was observed in Colombian L mariana much more frequently than in Costa Rican L mariana Decreased rates of hematodocal inflations and decreased sperm count positively correlated with increased possibility of the female attempting to cannibalize the male Female cannibalism only occurred when the male was attempting to mate Female choice of sexually successful males was associated with involved strength of cheliceral clasping duration of palpal insertion and sperm count measured through hematodocal inflation rates 9 10 Re mating Edit Female L mariana spiders often mate with more than one male and the traits of the female s first mate affect the likelihood that she accepts or rejects courtship from subsequent males 11 If during the first copulation the male made fewer short insertion and a higher number of flubs the female was more likely to accept mating with a second mate Because a majority of sperm transfer occurs during long insertions reduced number of short insertions may not affect sperm count 8 Social behavior EditLeucauge mariana spiders are generally solitary spiders for most of the year During the dry season however adults sometimes form aggregations in which their orb webs are built on shared tangles of support silk strands 5 Adult sociality Edit Adult males are unable to build orbs themselves but sometime evict nearly mature individuals presumably both males and females from their webs and use them for prey capture 6 Web Edit A ventral view of a mature female L mariana in her web Web type Edit Compared to some other orb weavers the horizontal webs of L mariana are more open meshed weaker and have small amounts of sticky material on the sticky spiral lines 12 Construction behavior and cues Edit Leucauge mariana build their orb webs of both non sticky silk and wet sticky silk Often a spider builds several orbs each day the first 1 to 2 hours before dawn another around noon and still another early in the evening Their orbs are relatively flimsy and are often attached to objects that move in the wind e g plant leaves and often accumulate damage relatively rapidly Spiders find websites by exploring their surroundings and often make long airborne lines to travel from previous websites As in other orb weavers a preliminary period of exploration of a site eventually ends when the spider establishes a site where three or more lines intersect this will be the point of reference for the hub Frame anchor line and radii construction are the next steps in web construction 13 14 A radius is constructed as part of the construction of each frame but other details of frame construction vary 15 L mariana often reuse the frame lines of previous webs when building a new orb at the same site 4 Typically several more radii are built after the last frame is in place and then hub loop construction begins after the last radius or occasionally after the penultimate radius is in place Hub construction begins when the spider grasps a line in the center of the hub with one leg III and begins to rotate slowly fastening adjacent radii to each other one after another This leg III is not moved during hub construction and is apparently used to measure the distance at which each hub spiral attachment should be made Hub construction ends abruptly and the spider moves farther away from the hub and begins to build the temporary spiral this line continues going outward toward the edge of the web The temporary spiral ends short of the web s edge and after a pause of a few seconds the spider begins laying a second sticky spiral working inward She removes the previous temporary spiral hence its name as she moves inward As is typical of orb webs the only sticky silk in the orb is the sticky spiral 13 14 15 Experiments regarding construction Edit Experiments and measurements of webs have demonstrated several surprising mental abilities in L mariana 16 When she begins an orb a spider can adjust several aspects of the design of an orb including the total area the number of radii and the spaces between sticky and non sticky spiral lines to the amount of sticky silk that she has available in her silk glands She also adjusts the spaces between spiral lines while she is building on the basis of the location of previous loops of sticky line memories of distances between lines that she encountered a few seconds previously the distance from the hub and the direction of gravity 17 Less complete data suggest that the spider may also remember the locations of alterations she encountered previously while she is circling the web laying the sticky spiral even after having circled 360o She can distinguish this alteration from a second alteration that she encounters after having circled only 270o Again these feats are accomplished even though the spider cannot see the lines in her web and must rely on touch to sense them Learning has little or no role in orb construction as tiny spiderlings that are newly emerged from the egg sac build orbs with equally precise spacing between lines and make equally elaborate adjustments to the environment such as limited spaces in which to build their orbs 18 Prey capture techniques Edit Perhaps due to the weakness of their webs female L mariana spiders are spectacularly fast hunters The female on her web can make quick and accurate turns towards vibrations caused by prey colliding with the web Spiders waiting at the hub responded with no preliminary warning to the impact of a prey on her web by turning up to greater than 90o locating new lines to grasp for all eight legs determining the location of the prey and ran 4 5 body lengths to attack all in as little as 0 21s The turns at the hub were precise the spider turned to hold the radius closest to the prey with one front leg in 90 of these rapid turns Vibrations produced by the prey s impact sensed by the legs were probably used to achieve this precise orientation The rear legs III and IV supported most of the spider s weight and supplied the motive force during the turn the spider used legs I and II to quickly find and grasp the radii These feats are especially impressive since the spiders are unable to see the lines in their webs the way they orient using their long front legs to find lines can be likened to a blind person with a cane would move while walking on a sparse network of aerial lines 12 16 References Edit a b Eberhard William G 2007 09 07 Miniaturized orb weaving spiders behavioural precision is not limited by small size Proceedings of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 274 1622 2203 2209 doi 10 1098 rspb 2007 0675 PMC 2706203 PMID 17609181 Small Spiders Have Big Brains That Spill Into Their Legs National Geographic News 2011 12 20 Retrieved 2020 11 03 a b Leucauge mariana Taczanowski 1881 www gbif org Retrieved 2020 10 20 a b Eberhard William G 1988 Behavioral Flexibility in Orb Web Construction Effects of Supplies in Different Silk Glands and Spider Size and Weight The Journal of Arachnology 16 3 295 302 ISSN 0161 8202 JSTOR 3705916 a b Salomon Maxence Sponarski Carly Larocque Allen Aviles Leticia 2012 Social organization of the colonial spider Leucauge sp in the Neotropics vertical stratification within colonies Journal of Arachnology 38 3 446 451 doi 10 1636 Hi09 99 1 ISSN 0161 8202 S2CID 54531040 a b c d e f g h Aisenberg Anita Barrantes Gilbert Eberhard William G 2015 Post copulatory Sexual Selection in Two Tropical Orb weaving Leucauge Spiders Cryptic Female Choice in Arthropods Cham Springer International Publishing pp 79 108 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 17894 3 4 ISBN 978 3 319 17893 6 retrieved 2020 10 17 a b Aisenberg Anita Barrantes Gilbert Eberhard William G February 2015 Hairy kisses tactile cheliceral courtship affects female mating decisions in Leucauge mariana Araneae Tetragnathidae Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology 69 2 313 323 doi 10 1007 s00265 014 1844 2 hdl 10669 79044 ISSN 0340 5443 S2CID 18718957 a b c d Eberhard William G Huber Bernhard A 1998 Courtship Copulation and Sperm Transfer in Leucauge mariana Araneae Tetragnathidae with Implications for Higher Classification The Journal of Arachnology 26 3 342 368 ISSN 0161 8202 JSTOR 3706241 a b Hernandez Linda Aisenberg Anita Molina Jorge January 2018 Hebets E ed Mating plugs and sexual cannibalism in the Colombian orb web spider Leucauge mariana Ethology 124 1 1 13 doi 10 1111 eth 12697 Hernandez Linda Molina Jorge Aisenberg Anita 2019 09 16 Shape of male palpal hook affects female sexual cannibalism in Leucauge mariana Araneae Tetragnathidae The Journal of Arachnology 47 2 280 doi 10 1636 joa s 18 058 ISSN 0161 8202 S2CID 202579389 Aisenberg Anita December 2009 Male Performance and Body Size Affect Female Re Mating Occurrence in the Orb Web SpiderLeucauge mariana Araneae Tetragnathidae Ethology 115 12 1127 1136 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2009 01701 x ISSN 0179 1613 a b Briceno R D Eberhard W G 2011 The hub as a launching platform rapid movements of the spider Leucauge mariana Araneae Tetragnathidae as it turns to attack prey The Journal of Arachnology 39 1 102 112 doi 10 1636 Hi10 76 1 ISSN 0161 8202 JSTOR 23048786 S2CID 43984275 a b Eberhard William G 1990 Early Stages of Orb Construction by Philoponella Vicina Leucauge Mariana and Nephila Clavipes Araneae Uloboridae and Tetragnathidae and Their Phylogenetic Implications The Journal of Arachnology 18 2 205 234 ISSN 0161 8202 JSTOR 3705838 a b Eberhard William G 1987 Hub construction by Leucauge mariana Araneae Araneidae PDF Bulletin of the British Arachnological Society 7 128 132 a b Eberhard William G June 1987 Effects of gravity on temporary spiral construction byLeucauge mariana Araneae Araneidae Journal of Ethology 5 1 29 36 doi 10 1007 bf02347892 ISSN 0289 0771 S2CID 23742076 a b Eberhard William G 2020 07 02 Relation between sexual allometry and function in the sawfly Leseha vespa Hymenoptera Tenthredinidae Ethology Ecology amp Evolution 33 1 14 doi 10 1080 03949370 2020 1777209 ISSN 0394 9370 S2CID 225612793 Eberhard William G Hesselberg Thomas 2012 Cues that Spiders Araneae Araneidae Tetragnathidae Use to Build Orbs Lapses in Attention to One Set of Cues because of Dissonance with Others Ethology 118 7 610 620 doi 10 1111 j 1439 0310 2012 02048 x ISSN 1439 0310 Quesada Rosannette Triana Emilia Vargas Gloria Douglass John K Seid Marc A Niven Jeremy E Eberhard William G Wcislo William T 2011 11 01 The allometry of CNS size and consequences of miniaturization in orb weaving and cleptoparasitic spiders Arthropod Structure amp Development 40 6 521 529 doi 10 1016 j asd 2011 07 002 ISSN 1467 8039 PMID 22036838 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leucauge mariana amp oldid 1077698457, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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