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Orb-weaver spider

Orb-weaver spiders are members of the spider family Araneidae. They are the most common group of builders of spiral wheel-shaped webs often found in gardens, fields, and forests. The English word "orb" can mean "circular",[1] hence the English name of the group. Araneids have eight similar eyes, hairy or spiny legs, and no stridulating organs.

Orb-weaver spiders
Temporal range: Cretaceous–present
Argiope catenulata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Superfamily: Araneoidea
Family: Araneidae
Clerck, 1757
Diversity
186 genera, 3108 species

The family has a cosmopolitan distribution, including many well-known large or brightly colored garden spiders. With 3,108 species in 186 genera worldwide, the Araneidae comprise the third-largest family of spiders (behind the Salticidae and Linyphiidae).[2] Araneid webs are constructed in a stereotypical fashion, where a framework of nonsticky silk is built up before the spider adds a final spiral of silk covered in sticky droplets.

Orb webs are also produced by members of other spider families. The long-jawed orb weavers (Tetragnathidae) were formerly included in the Araneidae; they are closely related, being part of the superfamily Araneoidea. The family Arkyidae has been split off from the Araneidae.[3][4][2] The cribellate or hackled orb-weavers (Uloboridae) belong to a different group of spiders. Their webs are strikingly similar, but use a different kind of silk.

Description

 
Argiope sp. sitting on the stabilimentum at the center of the web
 
Spiderlings in the web near where they hatched
 
Close-up of the cephalothorax on Eriophora sp. (possibly E. heroine or E. pustuosa)
 
Araneidae web
 
Araneidae waiting on its web for prey

Generally, orb-weaving spiders are three-clawed builders of flat webs with sticky spiral capture silk. The building of a web is an engineering feat, begun when the spider floats a line on the wind to another surface. The spider secures the line and then drops another line from the center, making a "Y". The rest of the scaffolding follows with many radii of nonsticky silk being constructed before a final spiral of sticky capture silk.

The third claw is used to walk on the nonsticky part of the web. Characteristically, the prey insect that blunders into the sticky lines is stunned by a quick bite, and then wrapped in silk. If the prey is a venomous insect, such as a wasp, wrapping may precede biting and/or stinging. Much of the orb-spinning spiders' success in capturing insects depends on the web not being visible to the prey, with the stickiness of the web increasing the visibility, thus decreasing the chances of capturing prey. This leads to a trade-off between the visibility of the web and the web's prey-retention ability.[5]

Many orb-weavers build a new web each day. Most orb-weavers tend to be active during the evening hours; they hide for most of the day. Generally, towards evening, the spider consumes the old web, rests for about an hour, then spins a new web in the same general location. Thus, the webs of orb-weavers are generally free of the accumulation of detritus common to other species, such as black widow spiders.

Some orb-weavers do not build webs at all. Members of the genera Mastophora in the Americas, Cladomelea in Africa, and Ordgarius in Australia produce sticky globules, which contain a pheromone analog. The globule is hung from a silken thread dangled by the spider from its front legs. The pheromone analog attracts male moths of only a few species. These get stuck on the globule and are reeled in to be eaten. Both genera of bolas spiders are highly camouflaged and difficult to locate.

In the Araneus diadematus, variables such as wind, web support, temperatures, humidity, and silk supply all proved to be variables in web construction. When studied against the tests of nature, the spiders were able to decide what shape to make their web, how many capture spirals, or the width of their web.[6] Though it could expected for these spiders to just know these things, it isn't well researched yet as to just how the arachnid knows how to change their web design based on their surroundings. Some scientists suggest that it could be through the spider's spatial learning on their environmental surroundings and the knowing of what will or won't work compared to natural behavioristic rules.[7]

The spiny orb-weaving spiders in the genera Gasteracantha and Micrathena look like plant seeds or thorns hanging in their orb-webs. Some species of Gasteracantha have very long, horn-like spines protruding from their abdomens.

One feature of the webs of some orb-weavers is the stabilimentum, a crisscross band of silk through the center of the web. It is found in several genera, but Argiope – the yellow and banded garden spiders of North America – is a prime example. As orb-weavers age, they tend to have less production of their silk; many adult orb-weavers can then depend on their coloration to attract more of their prey.[8] The band may be a lure for prey, a marker to warn birds away from the web, and a camouflage for the spider when it sits in the web. The stabilimentum may decrease the visibility of the silk to insects, thus making it harder for prey to avoid the web.[9] The orb-web consists of a frame and supporting radii overlaid with a sticky capture spiral, and the silks used by orb-weaver spiders have exceptional mechanical properties to withstand the impact of flying prey.[10] The orb-weaving spider Zygiella x-notata produces a unique orb-web with a characteristic missing sector, similar to other species of the Zygiella genus in the Araneidae family.[11]

During the Cretaceous, a radiation of flowering plants and their insect pollinators occurred. Fossil evidence shows that the orb web was in existence at this time, which permitted a concurrent radiation of the spider predators along with their insect prey.[12][13] The capacity of orb–webs to absorb the impact of flying prey led orbicularian spiders to become the dominant predators of aerial insects in many ecosystems.[14] Insects and spiders have comparable rates of diversification, suggesting they co-radiated, and the peak of this radiation occurred 100 Mya, before the origin of angiosperms.[15] Vollrath and Selden (2007) make the bold proposition that insect evolution was driven less by flowering plants than by spider predation – particularly through orb webs – as a major selective force.[15] On the other hand some analyses have yielded estimates as high as 265 Mya, with a large number (including Dimitrov et al 2016) intermediate between the two.[4]

Most arachnid webs are vertical and the spiders usually hang with their heads downward. A few webs, such as those of orb-weavers in the genus Metepeira, have the orb hidden within a tangled space of web. Some Metepiera species are semisocial and live in communal webs. In Mexico, such communal webs have been cut out of trees or bushes and used for living fly paper.[citation needed] In 2009, workers at a Baltimore wastewater treatment plant called for help to deal with over 100 million orb-weaver spiders, living in a community that managed to spin a phenomenal web that covered some 4 acres of a building, with spider densities in some areas reaching 35,176 spiders per cubic meter.[16]

Taxonomy

 
Argiope lobata in southern Spain

The oldest known true orb-weaver is Mesozygiella dunlopi, from the Lower Cretaceous. Several fossils provide direct evidence that the three major orb-weaving families, namely the Araneidae, Tetragnathidae, and Uloboridae, had evolved by this time, about 140 Mya.[17] They probably originated during the Jurassic (200 to 140 million years ago). Based on new molecular evidence in silk genes, all three families are likely to have a common origin.[10][13][14]

The two superfamilies, Deinopoidea and Araneoidea, have similar behavioral sequences and spinning apparatuses to produce architecturally similar webs. The latter weave true viscid silk with an aqueous glue property, and the former use dry fibrils and sticky silk.[10][18] The Deinopoidea (including the Uloboridae), have a cribellum – a flat, complex spinning plate from which the cribellate silk is released.[19]

They also have a calamistrum – an apparatus of bristles used to comb the cribellate silk from the cribellum. The Araneoidea, or the "ecribellate" spiders, do not have these two structures. The two groups of orb-weaving spiders are morphologically very distinct, yet much similarity exists between their web forms and web construction behaviors. The cribellates retained the ancestral character, yet the cribellum was lost in the escribellates. The lack of a functional cribellum in araneoids is most likely synapomorphic.[19]

If the orb-weaver spiders are a monophyletic group, the fact that only some species in the group lost a feature adds to the controversy. The cribellates are split off as a separate taxon that retained the primitive feature, which makes the lineage paraphyletic and not synonymous with any real evolutionary lineage. The morphological and behavioral evidence surrounding orb webs led to the disagreement over a single or a dual origin.[19] While early molecular analysis provided more support for a monophyletic origin,[10][13][14] other evidence indicates that orb-weavers evolved earlier phylogenetically than previously thought, and were extinct at least three times during the Cretaceous.[20][21][4]

Reproduction

Araneid species either mate at the central hub of the web, where the male slowly traverses the web, trying not to get eaten, and when reaching the hub, mounts the female; or the male constructs a mating thread inside or outside the web to attract the female via vibratory courtship, and if successful, mating occurs on the thread.[22]

In the cannibalistic and polyandrous orb-web spider Argiope bruennichi, the much smaller males are attacked during their first copulation and are cannibalized in up to 80% of the cases.[23] All surviving males die after their second copulation, a pattern observed on other Argiope species. Whether a male survives his first copulation depends on the duration of the genital contact; males that jump off early (before 5 seconds) have a chance of surviving, while males that copulate longer (greater than 10 seconds) invariably die. Prolonged copulation, although associated with cannibalism, enhances sperm transfer and relative paternity.[23]

When males mated with a nonsibling female, the duration of their copulation was prolonged, and consequently the males were cannibalized more frequently.[24] When males mated with a sibling female, they copulated briefly, thus were more likely to escape cannibalism. By escaping, their chance of mating again with an unrelated female likely would be increased. These observations suggest that males can adaptively adjust their investment based on the degree of genetic relatedness of the female to avoid inbreeding depression.

Sexual size dimorphism

Sexual dimorphism refers to physical differences between males and females of the same species. One such difference can be in size.

Araneids often exhibit size dimorphism typically known as extreme sexual size dimorphism, due to the extent of differences in size. The size difference among species of Araneidae ranges greatly. Some females, such as those of the Nephila pilipes, can be at least 9 times larger than the male, while others are only slightly larger than the male.[25] The larger size female is typically thought to be selected through fecundity selection,[26] the idea that bigger females can produce more eggs, thus more offspring. Although a great deal of evidence points towards the greatest selection pressure on larger female size, some evidence indicates that selection can favor small male size, as well.

Araneids also exhibit a phenomenon called sexual cannibalism, which is commonly found throughout the Araneidae.[22] Evidence suggests a negative correlation between sexual size dimorphism and instances of sexual cannibalism.[26] Other evidence, however, has shown that differences in cannibalistic events among araneids when having smaller or slightly larger males is advantageous.[22]

Some evidence has shown that extreme dimorphism may be the result of males avoiding detection by the females. For males of these species, being smaller in size may be advantageous in moving to the central hub of a web so female spiders may be less likely to detect the male, or even if detected as prey to be eaten, the small size may indicate little nutritional value. Larger-bodied male araneids may be advantageous when mating on a mating thread because the thread is constructed from the edge of the web orb to structural threads or to nearby vegetation.[22] Here larger males may be less likely to be cannibalized, as the males are able to copulate while the female is hanging, which may make them safer from cannibalism.[22] In one subfamily of Araneid that uses a mating thread, Gasteracanthinae, sexual cannibalism is apparently absent despite extreme size dimorphism.[27]

Genera

As of December 2022, the World Spider Catalog accepts the following genera:[28]

  • Acacesia Simon, 1895 — South America, North America
  • Acantharachne Tullgren, 1910 — Congo, Madagascar, Cameroon
  • Acanthepeira Marx, 1883 — North America, Brazil, Cuba
  • Acroaspis Karsch, 1878 — New Zealand, Australia
  • Acrosomoides Simon, 1887 — Madagascar, Cameroon, Congo
  • Actinacantha Simon, 1864 — Indonesia
  • Actinosoma Holmberg, 1883 — Colombia, Argentina
  • Aculepeira Chamberlin & Ivie, 1942 — North America, Central America, South America, Asia, Europe
  • Acusilas Simon, 1895 — Asia
  • Aethriscus Pocock, 1902 — Congo
  • Aethrodiscus Strand, 1913 — Central Africa
  • Aetrocantha Karsch, 1879 — Central Africa
  • Afracantha Dahl, 1914 — Africa
  • Agalenatea Archer, 1951 — Ethiopia, Asia
  • Alenatea Song & Zhu, 1999 — Asia
  • Allocyclosa Levi, 1999 — United States, Panama, Cuba
  • Alpaida O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889 — Central America, South America, Mexico, Caribbean
  • Amazonepeira Levi, 1989 — South America
  • Anepsion Strand, 1929 — Oceania, Asia
  • Aoaraneus Tanikawa, Yamasaki & Petcharad, 2021 — China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan
  • Arachnura Vinson, 1863 — Asia, Oceania, Africa
  • Araneus Clerck, 1757 — Africa, South America, North America, Oceania, Asia, Central America, Europe, Cuba
  • Araniella Chamberlin & Ivie, 1942 — Asia
  • Aranoethra Butler, 1873 — Africa
  • Argiope Audouin, 1826 — Asia, Oceania, Africa, North America, South America, Costa Rica, Cuba, Portugal
  • Artifex Kallal & Hormiga, 2018 — Australia
  • Artonis Simon, 1895 — Myanmar, Ethiopia
  • Aspidolasius Simon, 1887 — South America
  • Augusta O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1877 — Madagascar
  • Austracantha Dahl, 1914 — Australia
  • Backobourkia Framenau, Dupérré, Blackledge & Vink, 2010 — Australia, New Zealand
  • Bertrana Keyserling, 1884 — South America, Central America
  • Bijoaraneus Tanikawa, Yamasaki & Petcharad, 2021 — Africa, Asia, Oceania
  • Caerostris Thorell, 1868 — Africa, Asia
  • Carepalxis L. Koch, 1872 — Oceania, South America, Mexico, Jamaica
  • Celaenia Thorell, 1868 — Australia, New Zealand
  • Cercidia Thorell, 1869 — Russia, Kazakhstan, India
  • Chorizopes O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1871 — Asia, Madagascar
  • Chorizopesoides Mi & Wang, 2018 — China, Vietnam
  • Cladomelea Simon, 1895 — South Africa, Congo
  • Clitaetra Simon, 1889 — Africa, Sri Lanka
  • Cnodalia Thorell, 1890 — Indonesia, Japan
  • Coelossia Simon, 1895 — Sierra Leone, Mauritius, Madagascar
  • Colaranea Court & Forster, 1988 — New Zealand
  • Collina Urquhart, 1891 — Australia
  • Colphepeira Archer, 1941 — United States, Mexico
  • Courtaraneus Framenau, Vink, McQuillan & Simpson, 2022 — New Zealand
  • Cryptaranea Court & Forster, 1988 — New Zealand
  • Cyclosa Menge, 1866 — Caribbean, Asia, Oceania, South America, North America, Central America, Africa, Europe
  • Cyphalonotus Simon, 1895 — Asia, Africa
  • Cyrtarachne Thorell, 1868 — Asia, Africa, Oceania
  • Cyrtobill Framenau & Scharff, 2009 — Australia
  • Cyrtophora Simon, 1864 — Asia, Oceania, Dominican Republic, Costa Rica, South America, Africa
  • Deione Thorell, 1898 — Myanmar
  • Deliochus Simon, 1894 — Australia, Papua New Guinea
  • Dolophones Walckenaer, 1837 — Australia, Indonesia
  • Dubiepeira Levi, 1991 — South America
  • Edricus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1890 — Mexico, Panama, Ecuador
  • Enacrosoma Mello-Leitão, 1932 — South America, Central America, Mexico
  • Encyosaccus Simon, 1895 — South America
  • Epeiroides Keyserling, 1885 — Costa Rica, Brazil
  • Eriophora Simon, 1864 — Oceania, United States, South America, Central America, Africa
  • Eriovixia Archer, 1951 — Asia, Papua New Guinea, Africa
  • Eustacesia Caporiacco, 1954 — French Guiana
  • Eustala Simon, 1895 — South America, North America, Central America, Caribbean
  • Exechocentrus Simon, 1889 — Madagascar
  • Faradja Grasshoff, 1970 — Congo
  • Friula O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1897 — Indonesia
  • Galaporella Levi, 2009 — Ecuador
  • Gasteracantha Sundevall, 1833 — Oceania, Asia, United States, Africa, Chile
  • Gastroxya Benoit, 1962 — Africa
  • Gea C. L. Koch, 1843 — Africa, Oceania, Asia, United States, Argentina
  • Gibbaranea Archer, 1951 — Asia, Europe, Algeria
  • Glyptogona Simon, 1884 — Sri Lanka, Italy, Israel
  • Gnolus Simon, 1879 — Chile, Argentina
  • Guizygiella Zhu, Kim & Song, 1997 — Asia
  • Herennia Thorell, 1877 — Asia, Oceania
  • Heterognatha Nicolet, 1849 — Chile
  • Heurodes Keyserling, 1886 — Asia, Australia
  • Hingstepeira Levi, 1995 — South America
  • Hortophora Framenau & Castanheira, 2021 — Oceania
  • Hypognatha Guérin, 1839 — South America, Central America, Mexico, Trinidad
  • Hypsacantha Dahl, 1914 — Africa
  • Hypsosinga Ausserer, 1871 — Asia, North America, Greenland, Africa
  • Ideocaira Simon, 1903 — South Africa
  • Indoetra Kuntner, 2006 — Sri Lanka
  • Isoxya Simon, 1885 — Africa, Yemen
  • Kaira O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889 — North America, South America, Cuba, Guatemala
  • Kapogea Levi, 1997 — Mexico, South America, Central America
  • Kilima Grasshoff, 1970 — Congo, Seychelles, Yemen
  • Larinia Simon, 1874 — Asia, Africa, South America, Europe, Oceania, North America
  • Lariniaria Grasshoff, 1970 — Asia
  • Larinioides Caporiacco, 1934 — Asia
  • Lariniophora Framenau, 2011 — Australia
  • Leviana Framenau & Kuntner, 2022 — Australia
  • Leviellus Wunderlich, 2004 — Asia, France
  • Lewisepeira Levi, 1993 — Panama, Mexico, Jamaica
  • Lipocrea Thorell, 1878 — Asia, Europe
  • Macracantha Simon, 1864 — India, China, Indonesia
  • Madacantha Emerit, 1970 — Madagascar
  • Mahembea Grasshoff, 1970 — Central and East Africa
  • Mangora O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1889 — Asia, North America, South America, Central America, Caribbean
  • Mangrovia Framenau & Castanheira, 2022 — Australia
  • Manogea Levi, 1997 — South America, Central America, Mexico
  • Mastophora Holmberg, 1876 — South America, North America, Central America, Cuba
  • Mecynogea Simon, 1903 — North America, South America, Cuba
  • Megaraneus Lawrence, 1968 — Africa
  • Melychiopharis Simon, 1895 — Brazil
  • Metazygia F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1904 — South America, Central America, North America, Caribbean
  • Metepeira F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1903 — North America, Caribbean, South America, Central America
  • Micrathena Sundevall, 1833 — South America, Caribbean, Central America, North America
  • Micrepeira Schenkel, 1953 — South America, Costa Rica
  • Micropoltys Kulczyński, 1911 — Papua New Guinea, Australia
  • Milonia Thorell, 1890 — Singapore, Indonesia, Myanmar
  • Molinaranea Mello-Leitão, 1940 — Chile, Argentina
  • Nemoscolus Simon, 1895 — Africa
  • Nemosinga Caporiacco, 1947 — Tanzania
  • Nemospiza Simon, 1903 — South Africa
  • Neogea Levi, 1983 — Papua New Guinea, India, Indonesia
  • Neoscona Simon, 1864 — Asia, Africa, Europe, Oceania, North America, Cuba, South America
  • Nephila Leach, 1815 — Asia, Oceania, United States, Africa, South America
  • Nephilengys L. Koch, 1872 — Asia, Oceania
  • Nephilingis Kuntner, 2013 — South America, Africa
  • Nicolepeira Levi, 2001 — Chile
  • Novakiella Court & Forster, 1993 — Australia, New Zealand
  • Novaranea Court & Forster, 1988 — Australia, New Zealand
  • Nuctenea Simon, 1864 — Algeria, Asia, Europe
  • Oarces Simon, 1879 — Brazil, Chile, Argentina
  • Ocrepeira Marx, 1883 — South America, Central America, Caribbean, North America
  • Ordgarius Keyserling, 1886 — Asia, Oceania
  • Paralarinia Grasshoff, 1970 — Congo, South Africa
  • Paraplectana Brito Capello, 1867 — Asia, Africa
  • Paraplectanoides Keyserling, 1886 — Australia
  • Pararaneus Caporiacco, 1940 — Madagascar
  • Paraverrucosa Mello-Leitão, 1939 — South America
  • Parawixia F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1904 — Mexico, South America, Asia, Papua New Guinea, Central America, Trinidad
  • Parmatergus Emerit, 1994 — Madagascar
  • Pasilobus Simon, 1895 — Africa, Asia
  • Perilla Thorell, 1895 — Myanmar, Vietnam, Malaysia
  • Pherenice Thorell, 1899 — Cameroon
  • Phonognatha Simon, 1894 — Australia
  • Pitharatus Simon, 1895 — Malaysia, Indonesia
  • Plebs Joseph & Framenau, 2012 — Oceania, Asia
  • Poecilarcys Simon, 1895 — Tunisia
  • Poecilopachys Simon, 1895 — Oceania
  • Poltys C. L. Koch, 1843 — Asia, Africa, Oceania
  • Popperaneus Cabra-García & Hormiga, 2020 — Brazil, Paraguay
  • Porcataraneus Mi & Peng, 2011 — India, China
  • Pozonia Schenkel, 1953 — Caribbean, Paraguay, Mexico, Panama
  • Prasonica Simon, 1895 — Africa, Asia, Oceania
  • Prasonicella Grasshoff, 1971 — Madagascar, Seychelles
  • Pronoides Schenkel, 1936 — Asia
  • Pronous Keyserling, 1881 — Malaysia, Mexico, Central America, South America, Madagascar
  • Pseudartonis Simon, 1903 — Africa
  • Pseudopsyllo Strand, 1916 — Cameroon
  • Psyllo Thorell, 1899 — Cameroon, Congo
  • Pycnacantha Blackwall, 1865 — Africa
  • Rubrepeira Levi, 1992 — Mexico, Brazil
  • Salsa Framenau & Castanheira, 2022 — Australia, New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea
  • Scoloderus Simon, 1887 — Belize, North America, Argentina, Caribbean
  • Sedasta Simon, 1894 — West Africa
  • Singa C. L. Koch, 1836 — Africa, Asia, North America, Europe
  • Singafrotypa Benoit, 1962 — Africa
  • Siwa Grasshoff, 1970 — Asia
  • Socca Framenau, Castanheira & Vink, 2022 — Australia
  • Spilasma Simon, 1897 — South America, Honduras
  • Spinepeira Levi, 1995 — Peru
  • Spintharidius Simon, 1893 — South America, Cuba
  • Taczanowskia Keyserling, 1879 — Mexico, South America
  • Talthybia Thorell, 1898 — China, Myanmar
  • Tatepeira Levi, 1995 — South America, Honduras
  • Telaprocera Harmer & Framenau, 2008 — Australia
  • Testudinaria Taczanowski, 1879 — South America, Panama
  • Thelacantha Hasselt, 1882 — Madagascar, Asia, Australia
  • Thorellina Berg, 1899 — Myanmar, Papua New Guinea
  • Togacantha Dahl, 1914 — Africa
  • Trichonephila Dahl, 1911 — Africa, Asia, Oceania, North America, South America
  • Umbonata Grasshoff, 1971 — Tanzania
  • Ursa Simon, 1895 — Asia, South America, South Africa
  • Verrucosa McCook, 1888 — North America, Panama, South America, Australia
  • Wagneriana F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1904 — South America, Central America, Caribbean, North America
  • Witica O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1895 — Cuba, Mexico, Peru
  • Wixia O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1882 — Brazil, Guyana, Bolivia
  • Xylethrus Simon, 1895 — South America, Mexico, Jamaica, Panama
  • Yaginumia Archer, 1960 — Asia
  • Zealaranea Court & Forster, 1988 — New Zealand
  • Zilla C. L. Koch, 1834 — Azerbaijan, India, China
  • Zygiella F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1902 — North America, Asia, Ukraine, South America

See also

References

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  4. ^ a b c Dimitrov, Dimitar; Hormiga, Gustavo (2021-01-07). "Spider Diversification Through Space and Time". Annual Review of Entomology. Annual Reviews. 66 (1): 225–241. doi:10.1146/annurev-ento-061520-083414. ISSN 0066-4170. PMID 32822555. S2CID 221235817.
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  17. ^ Peñalver, Enrique; Grimaldi, David A. & Delclòs, Xavier (2006). "Early Cretaceous spider web with its prey". Science. 312 (5781): 1761. doi:10.1126/science.1126628. PMID 16794072. S2CID 34828913.
  18. ^ Shear, William A. (1986). "The evolution of web-building behavior in spiders: a third generation of hypotheses". In Shear, William A. (ed.). Spiders: webs, behavior, and evolution. Stanford CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 364–400. ISBN 978-0-8047-1203-3.
  19. ^ a b c Coddington, Jonathan A. (1986). "The monophyletic origin of the orb web". In Shear, William A. (ed.). Spiders: webs, behavior, and evolution. Stanford CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 319–363. ISBN 978-0-8047-1203-3.
  20. ^ Fernández, R; Kallal, R.J.; Dimitrov, D (2018). "Phylogenomics, diversification dynamics, and comparative transcriptomics across the spider tree of life". Current Biology. 28 (9): 1489–1497.e5. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2018.03.064. PMID 29706520.
  21. ^ Garrison, N; Rodriguez, L. J.; Agnarsson, I; Coddington, J.A.; Griswold, Charles E.; Hamilton, C.A; Hedin, M. (2016). "Spider phylogenomics: untangling the spider tree of life". PeerJ. 4: e1719. doi:10.7717/peerj.1719. PMC 4768681. PMID 26925338.
  22. ^ a b c d e Elgar, Mark (1991). "Sexual Cannibalism, Size Dimorphism, and Courtship Behavior in Orb-Weaving Spiders (Araneidae)". Evolution. 45 (2): 444–448. doi:10.2307/2409679. JSTOR 2409679. PMID 28567867.
  23. ^ a b Schneider, J.M.; Gilberg, S.; Fromhage, L. & Uhl, G. (2006). "Sexual conflict over copulation duration in a cannibalistic spider". Animal Behaviour. 71 (4): 781–788. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2005.05.012. S2CID 53171331.
  24. ^ Welke, K.W. & Schneider, J.M. (2010). "Males of the orb-web spider Argiope bruennichi sacrifice themselves to unrelated females". Biol. Lett. 6 (5): 585–588. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2010.0214. PMC 2936157. PMID 20410027.
  25. ^ Gustavo, H.; Scharff, N. & Coddington, J. (2000). "The Phylogenetic Basis of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Orb-Weaving Spiders (Araneae, Orbiculariae)". Systematic Biology. 49 (3): 435–462. doi:10.1080/10635159950127330. PMID 12116421.
  26. ^ a b Legrand, R.S.; Morse, D.H. (2000). "Factors driving extreme sexual size dimorphism of a sit-and-wait predator under low density". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society. 71 (4): 643–664. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2000.tb01283.x.
  27. ^ Elgar, M. A. (1990). "Sexual dimorphism in leg-length among orb-weaving spiders: a possible role for sexual cannibalism". Journal of Zoology (London). 220 (3): 455–470. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1990.tb04044.x.
  28. ^ "Family: Araneidae Clerck, 1757". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2022-12-08.

Further reading

  • Crompton, John (1950). The Life of the Spider. New York: Mentor. OCLC 610423670.
  • Dondale, C. D.; Redner, J. H.; Paquin, P.; Levi, H. W. (2003). The Orb-Weaving Spiders of Canada and Alaska. Araneae: Uloboridae, Tetragnathidae, Araneidae, Theridiosomatidae. Insects and Arachnids of Canada. Vol. 23. Ottawa: NRC Research Press. ISBN 978-0-660-18898-0.
  • Kaston, B. J. (1953). How to Know the Spiders. Pictured key nature series (1st ed.). Dubuque, IA: W. C. Brown Co. OCLC 681432632.
  • Levi, H. W. (1993). "The new orb-weaver genus Lewisepeira (Araneae: Araneidae)". Psyche. 100 (3–4): 127–136. doi:10.1155/1993/97657.
  • Main, Barbara York (1976). Spiders. Australian Naturalist Library (2nd ed.). Sydney: Collins. OCLC 849736139.
  • Foelix, Rainer F. (1996). Biology of Spiders (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-509594-4. OCLC 300192823.

External links

weaver, spider, members, spider, family, araneidae, they, most, common, group, builders, spiral, wheel, shaped, webs, often, found, gardens, fields, forests, english, word, mean, circular, hence, english, name, group, araneids, have, eight, similar, eyes, hair. Orb weaver spiders are members of the spider family Araneidae They are the most common group of builders of spiral wheel shaped webs often found in gardens fields and forests The English word orb can mean circular 1 hence the English name of the group Araneids have eight similar eyes hairy or spiny legs and no stridulating organs Orb weaver spidersTemporal range Cretaceous present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NArgiope catenulataScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaSubphylum ChelicerataClass ArachnidaOrder AraneaeInfraorder AraneomorphaeSuperfamily AraneoideaFamily AraneidaeClerck 1757Diversity186 genera 3108 speciesThe family has a cosmopolitan distribution including many well known large or brightly colored garden spiders With 3 108 species in 186 genera worldwide the Araneidae comprise the third largest family of spiders behind the Salticidae and Linyphiidae 2 Araneid webs are constructed in a stereotypical fashion where a framework of nonsticky silk is built up before the spider adds a final spiral of silk covered in sticky droplets Orb webs are also produced by members of other spider families The long jawed orb weavers Tetragnathidae were formerly included in the Araneidae they are closely related being part of the superfamily Araneoidea The family Arkyidae has been split off from the Araneidae 3 4 2 The cribellate or hackled orb weavers Uloboridae belong to a different group of spiders Their webs are strikingly similar but use a different kind of silk Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Reproduction 3 1 Sexual size dimorphism 4 Genera 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksDescription Edit Argiope sp sitting on the stabilimentum at the center of the web Spiderlings in the web near where they hatched Close up of the cephalothorax on Eriophora sp possibly E heroine or E pustuosa Gasteracantha cancriformis Araneidae web Araneidae waiting on its web for prey Generally orb weaving spiders are three clawed builders of flat webs with sticky spiral capture silk The building of a web is an engineering feat begun when the spider floats a line on the wind to another surface The spider secures the line and then drops another line from the center making a Y The rest of the scaffolding follows with many radii of nonsticky silk being constructed before a final spiral of sticky capture silk The third claw is used to walk on the nonsticky part of the web Characteristically the prey insect that blunders into the sticky lines is stunned by a quick bite and then wrapped in silk If the prey is a venomous insect such as a wasp wrapping may precede biting and or stinging Much of the orb spinning spiders success in capturing insects depends on the web not being visible to the prey with the stickiness of the web increasing the visibility thus decreasing the chances of capturing prey This leads to a trade off between the visibility of the web and the web s prey retention ability 5 Many orb weavers build a new web each day Most orb weavers tend to be active during the evening hours they hide for most of the day Generally towards evening the spider consumes the old web rests for about an hour then spins a new web in the same general location Thus the webs of orb weavers are generally free of the accumulation of detritus common to other species such as black widow spiders Some orb weavers do not build webs at all Members of the genera Mastophora in the Americas Cladomelea in Africa and Ordgarius in Australia produce sticky globules which contain a pheromone analog The globule is hung from a silken thread dangled by the spider from its front legs The pheromone analog attracts male moths of only a few species These get stuck on the globule and are reeled in to be eaten Both genera of bolas spiders are highly camouflaged and difficult to locate In the Araneus diadematus variables such as wind web support temperatures humidity and silk supply all proved to be variables in web construction When studied against the tests of nature the spiders were able to decide what shape to make their web how many capture spirals or the width of their web 6 Though it could expected for these spiders to just know these things it isn t well researched yet as to just how the arachnid knows how to change their web design based on their surroundings Some scientists suggest that it could be through the spider s spatial learning on their environmental surroundings and the knowing of what will or won t work compared to natural behavioristic rules 7 The spiny orb weaving spiders in the genera Gasteracantha and Micrathena look like plant seeds or thorns hanging in their orb webs Some species of Gasteracantha have very long horn like spines protruding from their abdomens One feature of the webs of some orb weavers is the stabilimentum a crisscross band of silk through the center of the web It is found in several genera but Argiope the yellow and banded garden spiders of North America is a prime example As orb weavers age they tend to have less production of their silk many adult orb weavers can then depend on their coloration to attract more of their prey 8 The band may be a lure for prey a marker to warn birds away from the web and a camouflage for the spider when it sits in the web The stabilimentum may decrease the visibility of the silk to insects thus making it harder for prey to avoid the web 9 The orb web consists of a frame and supporting radii overlaid with a sticky capture spiral and the silks used by orb weaver spiders have exceptional mechanical properties to withstand the impact of flying prey 10 The orb weaving spider Zygiella x notata produces a unique orb web with a characteristic missing sector similar to other species of the Zygiella genus in the Araneidae family 11 During the Cretaceous a radiation of flowering plants and their insect pollinators occurred Fossil evidence shows that the orb web was in existence at this time which permitted a concurrent radiation of the spider predators along with their insect prey 12 13 The capacity of orb webs to absorb the impact of flying prey led orbicularian spiders to become the dominant predators of aerial insects in many ecosystems 14 Insects and spiders have comparable rates of diversification suggesting they co radiated and the peak of this radiation occurred 100 Mya before the origin of angiosperms 15 Vollrath and Selden 2007 make the bold proposition that insect evolution was driven less by flowering plants than by spider predation particularly through orb webs as a major selective force 15 On the other hand some analyses have yielded estimates as high as 265 Mya with a large number including Dimitrov et al 2016 intermediate between the two 4 Most arachnid webs are vertical and the spiders usually hang with their heads downward A few webs such as those of orb weavers in the genus Metepeira have the orb hidden within a tangled space of web Some Metepiera species are semisocial and live in communal webs In Mexico such communal webs have been cut out of trees or bushes and used for living fly paper citation needed In 2009 workers at a Baltimore wastewater treatment plant called for help to deal with over 100 million orb weaver spiders living in a community that managed to spin a phenomenal web that covered some 4 acres of a building with spider densities in some areas reaching 35 176 spiders per cubic meter 16 Taxonomy Edit Argiope lobata in southern Spain The oldest known true orb weaver is Mesozygiella dunlopi from the Lower Cretaceous Several fossils provide direct evidence that the three major orb weaving families namely the Araneidae Tetragnathidae and Uloboridae had evolved by this time about 140 Mya 17 They probably originated during the Jurassic 200 to 140 million years ago Based on new molecular evidence in silk genes all three families are likely to have a common origin 10 13 14 The two superfamilies Deinopoidea and Araneoidea have similar behavioral sequences and spinning apparatuses to produce architecturally similar webs The latter weave true viscid silk with an aqueous glue property and the former use dry fibrils and sticky silk 10 18 The Deinopoidea including the Uloboridae have a cribellum a flat complex spinning plate from which the cribellate silk is released 19 They also have a calamistrum an apparatus of bristles used to comb the cribellate silk from the cribellum The Araneoidea or the ecribellate spiders do not have these two structures The two groups of orb weaving spiders are morphologically very distinct yet much similarity exists between their web forms and web construction behaviors The cribellates retained the ancestral character yet the cribellum was lost in the escribellates The lack of a functional cribellum in araneoids is most likely synapomorphic 19 If the orb weaver spiders are a monophyletic group the fact that only some species in the group lost a feature adds to the controversy The cribellates are split off as a separate taxon that retained the primitive feature which makes the lineage paraphyletic and not synonymous with any real evolutionary lineage The morphological and behavioral evidence surrounding orb webs led to the disagreement over a single or a dual origin 19 While early molecular analysis provided more support for a monophyletic origin 10 13 14 other evidence indicates that orb weavers evolved earlier phylogenetically than previously thought and were extinct at least three times during the Cretaceous 20 21 4 Reproduction EditAraneid species either mate at the central hub of the web where the male slowly traverses the web trying not to get eaten and when reaching the hub mounts the female or the male constructs a mating thread inside or outside the web to attract the female via vibratory courtship and if successful mating occurs on the thread 22 In the cannibalistic and polyandrous orb web spider Argiope bruennichi the much smaller males are attacked during their first copulation and are cannibalized in up to 80 of the cases 23 All surviving males die after their second copulation a pattern observed on other Argiope species Whether a male survives his first copulation depends on the duration of the genital contact males that jump off early before 5 seconds have a chance of surviving while males that copulate longer greater than 10 seconds invariably die Prolonged copulation although associated with cannibalism enhances sperm transfer and relative paternity 23 When males mated with a nonsibling female the duration of their copulation was prolonged and consequently the males were cannibalized more frequently 24 When males mated with a sibling female they copulated briefly thus were more likely to escape cannibalism By escaping their chance of mating again with an unrelated female likely would be increased These observations suggest that males can adaptively adjust their investment based on the degree of genetic relatedness of the female to avoid inbreeding depression Sexual size dimorphism Edit Sexual dimorphism refers to physical differences between males and females of the same species One such difference can be in size Araneids often exhibit size dimorphism typically known as extreme sexual size dimorphism due to the extent of differences in size The size difference among species of Araneidae ranges greatly Some females such as those of the Nephila pilipes can be at least 9 times larger than the male while others are only slightly larger than the male 25 The larger size female is typically thought to be selected through fecundity selection 26 the idea that bigger females can produce more eggs thus more offspring Although a great deal of evidence points towards the greatest selection pressure on larger female size some evidence indicates that selection can favor small male size as well Araneids also exhibit a phenomenon called sexual cannibalism which is commonly found throughout the Araneidae 22 Evidence suggests a negative correlation between sexual size dimorphism and instances of sexual cannibalism 26 Other evidence however has shown that differences in cannibalistic events among araneids when having smaller or slightly larger males is advantageous 22 Some evidence has shown that extreme dimorphism may be the result of males avoiding detection by the females For males of these species being smaller in size may be advantageous in moving to the central hub of a web so female spiders may be less likely to detect the male or even if detected as prey to be eaten the small size may indicate little nutritional value Larger bodied male araneids may be advantageous when mating on a mating thread because the thread is constructed from the edge of the web orb to structural threads or to nearby vegetation 22 Here larger males may be less likely to be cannibalized as the males are able to copulate while the female is hanging which may make them safer from cannibalism 22 In one subfamily of Araneid that uses a mating thread Gasteracanthinae sexual cannibalism is apparently absent despite extreme size dimorphism 27 Genera EditAs of December 2022 update the World Spider Catalog accepts the following genera 28 Acacesia Simon 1895 South America North America Acantharachne Tullgren 1910 Congo Madagascar Cameroon Acanthepeira Marx 1883 North America Brazil Cuba Acroaspis Karsch 1878 New Zealand Australia Acrosomoides Simon 1887 Madagascar Cameroon Congo Actinacantha Simon 1864 Indonesia Actinosoma Holmberg 1883 Colombia Argentina Aculepeira Chamberlin amp Ivie 1942 North America Central America South America Asia Europe Acusilas Simon 1895 Asia Aethriscus Pocock 1902 Congo Aethrodiscus Strand 1913 Central Africa Aetrocantha Karsch 1879 Central Africa Afracantha Dahl 1914 Africa Agalenatea Archer 1951 Ethiopia Asia Alenatea Song amp Zhu 1999 Asia Allocyclosa Levi 1999 United States Panama Cuba Alpaida O Pickard Cambridge 1889 Central America South America Mexico Caribbean Amazonepeira Levi 1989 South America Anepsion Strand 1929 Oceania Asia Aoaraneus Tanikawa Yamasaki amp Petcharad 2021 China Japan Korea Taiwan Arachnura Vinson 1863 Asia Oceania Africa Araneus Clerck 1757 Africa South America North America Oceania Asia Central America Europe Cuba Araniella Chamberlin amp Ivie 1942 Asia Aranoethra Butler 1873 Africa Argiope Audouin 1826 Asia Oceania Africa North America South America Costa Rica Cuba Portugal Artifex Kallal amp Hormiga 2018 Australia Artonis Simon 1895 Myanmar Ethiopia Aspidolasius Simon 1887 South America Augusta O Pickard Cambridge 1877 Madagascar Austracantha Dahl 1914 Australia Backobourkia Framenau Duperre Blackledge amp Vink 2010 Australia New Zealand Bertrana Keyserling 1884 South America Central America Bijoaraneus Tanikawa Yamasaki amp Petcharad 2021 Africa Asia Oceania Caerostris Thorell 1868 Africa Asia Carepalxis L Koch 1872 Oceania South America Mexico Jamaica Celaenia Thorell 1868 Australia New Zealand Cercidia Thorell 1869 Russia Kazakhstan India Chorizopes O Pickard Cambridge 1871 Asia Madagascar Chorizopesoides Mi amp Wang 2018 China Vietnam Cladomelea Simon 1895 South Africa Congo Clitaetra Simon 1889 Africa Sri Lanka Cnodalia Thorell 1890 Indonesia Japan Coelossia Simon 1895 Sierra Leone Mauritius Madagascar Colaranea Court amp Forster 1988 New Zealand Collina Urquhart 1891 Australia Colphepeira Archer 1941 United States Mexico Courtaraneus Framenau Vink McQuillan amp Simpson 2022 New Zealand Cryptaranea Court amp Forster 1988 New Zealand Cyclosa Menge 1866 Caribbean Asia Oceania South America North America Central America Africa Europe Cyphalonotus Simon 1895 Asia Africa Cyrtarachne Thorell 1868 Asia Africa Oceania Cyrtobill Framenau amp Scharff 2009 Australia Cyrtophora Simon 1864 Asia Oceania Dominican Republic Costa Rica South America Africa Deione Thorell 1898 Myanmar Deliochus Simon 1894 Australia Papua New Guinea Dolophones Walckenaer 1837 Australia Indonesia Dubiepeira Levi 1991 South America Edricus O Pickard Cambridge 1890 Mexico Panama Ecuador Enacrosoma Mello Leitao 1932 South America Central America Mexico Encyosaccus Simon 1895 South America Epeiroides Keyserling 1885 Costa Rica Brazil Eriophora Simon 1864 Oceania United States South America Central America Africa Eriovixia Archer 1951 Asia Papua New Guinea Africa Eustacesia Caporiacco 1954 French Guiana Eustala Simon 1895 South America North America Central America Caribbean Exechocentrus Simon 1889 Madagascar Faradja Grasshoff 1970 Congo Friula O Pickard Cambridge 1897 Indonesia Galaporella Levi 2009 Ecuador Gasteracantha Sundevall 1833 Oceania Asia United States Africa Chile Gastroxya Benoit 1962 Africa Gea C L Koch 1843 Africa Oceania Asia United States Argentina Gibbaranea Archer 1951 Asia Europe Algeria Glyptogona Simon 1884 Sri Lanka Italy Israel Gnolus Simon 1879 Chile Argentina Guizygiella Zhu Kim amp Song 1997 Asia Herennia Thorell 1877 Asia Oceania Heterognatha Nicolet 1849 Chile Heurodes Keyserling 1886 Asia Australia Hingstepeira Levi 1995 South America Hortophora Framenau amp Castanheira 2021 Oceania Hypognatha Guerin 1839 South America Central America Mexico Trinidad Hypsacantha Dahl 1914 Africa Hypsosinga Ausserer 1871 Asia North America Greenland Africa Ideocaira Simon 1903 South Africa Indoetra Kuntner 2006 Sri Lanka Isoxya Simon 1885 Africa Yemen Kaira O Pickard Cambridge 1889 North America South America Cuba Guatemala Kapogea Levi 1997 Mexico South America Central America Kilima Grasshoff 1970 Congo Seychelles Yemen Larinia Simon 1874 Asia Africa South America Europe Oceania North America Lariniaria Grasshoff 1970 Asia Larinioides Caporiacco 1934 Asia Lariniophora Framenau 2011 Australia Leviana Framenau amp Kuntner 2022 Australia Leviellus Wunderlich 2004 Asia France Lewisepeira Levi 1993 Panama Mexico Jamaica Lipocrea Thorell 1878 Asia Europe Macracantha Simon 1864 India China Indonesia Madacantha Emerit 1970 Madagascar Mahembea Grasshoff 1970 Central and East Africa Mangora O Pickard Cambridge 1889 Asia North America South America Central America Caribbean Mangrovia Framenau amp Castanheira 2022 Australia Manogea Levi 1997 South America Central America Mexico Mastophora Holmberg 1876 South America North America Central America Cuba Mecynogea Simon 1903 North America South America Cuba Megaraneus Lawrence 1968 Africa Melychiopharis Simon 1895 Brazil Metazygia F O Pickard Cambridge 1904 South America Central America North America Caribbean Metepeira F O Pickard Cambridge 1903 North America Caribbean South America Central America Micrathena Sundevall 1833 South America Caribbean Central America North America Micrepeira Schenkel 1953 South America Costa Rica Micropoltys Kulczynski 1911 Papua New Guinea Australia Milonia Thorell 1890 Singapore Indonesia Myanmar Molinaranea Mello Leitao 1940 Chile Argentina Nemoscolus Simon 1895 Africa Nemosinga Caporiacco 1947 Tanzania Nemospiza Simon 1903 South Africa Neogea Levi 1983 Papua New Guinea India Indonesia Neoscona Simon 1864 Asia Africa Europe Oceania North America Cuba South America Nephila Leach 1815 Asia Oceania United States Africa South America Nephilengys L Koch 1872 Asia Oceania Nephilingis Kuntner 2013 South America Africa Nicolepeira Levi 2001 Chile Novakiella Court amp Forster 1993 Australia New Zealand Novaranea Court amp Forster 1988 Australia New Zealand Nuctenea Simon 1864 Algeria Asia Europe Oarces Simon 1879 Brazil Chile Argentina Ocrepeira Marx 1883 South America Central America Caribbean North America Ordgarius Keyserling 1886 Asia Oceania Paralarinia Grasshoff 1970 Congo South Africa Paraplectana Brito Capello 1867 Asia Africa Paraplectanoides Keyserling 1886 Australia Pararaneus Caporiacco 1940 Madagascar Paraverrucosa Mello Leitao 1939 South America Parawixia F O Pickard Cambridge 1904 Mexico South America Asia Papua New Guinea Central America Trinidad Parmatergus Emerit 1994 Madagascar Pasilobus Simon 1895 Africa Asia Perilla Thorell 1895 Myanmar Vietnam Malaysia Pherenice Thorell 1899 Cameroon Phonognatha Simon 1894 Australia Pitharatus Simon 1895 Malaysia Indonesia Plebs Joseph amp Framenau 2012 Oceania Asia Poecilarcys Simon 1895 Tunisia Poecilopachys Simon 1895 Oceania Poltys C L Koch 1843 Asia Africa Oceania Popperaneus Cabra Garcia amp Hormiga 2020 Brazil Paraguay Porcataraneus Mi amp Peng 2011 India China Pozonia Schenkel 1953 Caribbean Paraguay Mexico Panama Prasonica Simon 1895 Africa Asia Oceania Prasonicella Grasshoff 1971 Madagascar Seychelles Pronoides Schenkel 1936 Asia Pronous Keyserling 1881 Malaysia Mexico Central America South America Madagascar Pseudartonis Simon 1903 Africa Pseudopsyllo Strand 1916 Cameroon Psyllo Thorell 1899 Cameroon Congo Pycnacantha Blackwall 1865 Africa Rubrepeira Levi 1992 Mexico Brazil Salsa Framenau amp Castanheira 2022 Australia New Caledonia Papua New Guinea Scoloderus Simon 1887 Belize North America Argentina Caribbean Sedasta Simon 1894 West Africa Singa C L Koch 1836 Africa Asia North America Europe Singafrotypa Benoit 1962 Africa Siwa Grasshoff 1970 Asia Socca Framenau Castanheira amp Vink 2022 Australia Spilasma Simon 1897 South America Honduras Spinepeira Levi 1995 Peru Spintharidius Simon 1893 South America Cuba Taczanowskia Keyserling 1879 Mexico South America Talthybia Thorell 1898 China Myanmar Tatepeira Levi 1995 South America Honduras Telaprocera Harmer amp Framenau 2008 Australia Testudinaria Taczanowski 1879 South America Panama Thelacantha Hasselt 1882 Madagascar Asia Australia Thorellina Berg 1899 Myanmar Papua New Guinea Togacantha Dahl 1914 Africa Trichonephila Dahl 1911 Africa Asia Oceania North America South America Umbonata Grasshoff 1971 Tanzania Ursa Simon 1895 Asia South America South Africa Verrucosa McCook 1888 North America Panama South America Australia Wagneriana F O Pickard Cambridge 1904 South America Central America Caribbean North America Witica O Pickard Cambridge 1895 Cuba Mexico Peru Wixia O Pickard Cambridge 1882 Brazil Guyana Bolivia Xylethrus Simon 1895 South America Mexico Jamaica Panama Yaginumia Archer 1960 Asia Zealaranea Court amp Forster 1988 New Zealand Zilla C L Koch 1834 Azerbaijan India China Zygiella F O Pickard Cambridge 1902 North America Asia Ukraine South AmericaSee also Edit Arthropods portalList of Araneidae speciesReferences Edit orb Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 5 December 2015 a b Currently valid spider genera and species World Spider Catalog Natural History Museum Bern Retrieved 16 August 2017 Dimitrov Dimitar Benavides Ligia R Arnedo Miquel A Giribet Gonzalo Griswold Charles E Scharff Nikolaj amp Hormiga Gustavo 2016 Rounding up the usual suspects a standard target gene approach for resolving the interfamilial phylogenetic relationships of ecribellate orb weaving spiders with a new family rank classification Araneae Araneoidea PDF Cladistics 33 3 221 250 doi 10 1111 cla 12165 PMID 34715728 S2CID 34962403 Retrieved 2016 10 18 a b c Dimitrov Dimitar Hormiga Gustavo 2021 01 07 Spider Diversification Through Space and Time Annual Review of Entomology Annual Reviews 66 1 225 241 doi 10 1146 annurev ento 061520 083414 ISSN 0066 4170 PMID 32822555 S2CID 221235817 Craig C L 1988 Insect Perception of Spider Orb Webs in Three Light Habitats Functional Ecology 2 3 277 282 doi 10 2307 2389398 ISSN 0269 8463 JSTOR 2389398 Vollrath Fritz Downes Mike Krackow Sven 1997 10 01 Design Variability in Web Geometry of an Orb Weaving Spider Physiology amp Behavior 62 4 735 743 doi 10 1016 S0031 9384 97 00186 8 ISSN 0031 9384 PMID 9284492 S2CID 38948237 Exploration behaviour and behavioural flexibility in orb web spiders A review academic oup com Retrieved 2022 10 23 Galvez Dumas Anino Yostin De la O Jorge M 26 February 2018 Age variation in the body coloration of the orb weaver spider Alpaida tuonabo and its implications on foraging Scientific Reports 8 1 3599 Bibcode 2018NatSR 8 3599G doi 10 1038 s41598 018 21971 0 ISSN 2045 2322 PMC 5827658 PMID 29483535 Blackledge Todd A amp Wenzel John W 2000 The evolution of cryptic spider silk a behavioral test Behavioral Ecology 11 2 142 145 doi 10 1093 beheco 11 2 142 a b c d Garb Jessica E DiMauro Teresa Vo Victoria amp Hayashi Cheryl Y 2006 Silk genes support the single origin of orb webs Science 312 5781 1762 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 623 4339 doi 10 1126 science 1127946 PMID 16794073 S2CID 889557 Venner Samuel Pasquet Alain Leborgne Raymond 2000 Web building behaviour in the orb weaving spider Zygiella x notata influence of experience Animal Behaviour 59 3 603 611 doi 10 1006 anbe 1999 1327 ISSN 0003 3472 PMID 10715183 S2CID 41339367 Detangling History Smithsonian 24 September 2006 Two pieces of Spanish amber contain the oldest known spider web and orb weaving spider both specimens are at least 110 million years old The new findings along with an analysis of the proteins in spider silk indicate that orb weaving spiders date as far back as 144 million years a b c Penney David amp Ortuno Vicente M 2006 Oldest true orb weaving spider Araneae Araneidae Biology Letters 2 3 447 450 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2006 0506 PMC 1686203 PMID 17148427 a b c Blackledge Todd A Scharff Nikolaj Coddington Jonathan A Szuts Tamas Wenzel John W Hayashi Cheryl Y amp Agnarsson Ingi 2009 Reconstructing web evolution and spider diversification in the molecular era Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 106 13 5229 5234 Bibcode 2009PNAS 106 5229B doi 10 1073 pnas 0901377106 PMC 2656561 PMID 19289848 a b Vollrath Fritz amp Selden Paul 2007 The role of behavior in the evolution of spiders silks and webs Annual Review of Ecology Evolution and Systematics 38 819 846 doi 10 1146 annurev ecolsys 37 091305 110221 S2CID 54518303 Alford Justine 2 November 2014 Orb Weaver Spiders Stuff A Treatment Plant With A 4 Acre Web IFLScience Retrieved 6 April 2015 Penalver Enrique Grimaldi David A amp Delclos Xavier 2006 Early Cretaceous spider web with its prey Science 312 5781 1761 doi 10 1126 science 1126628 PMID 16794072 S2CID 34828913 Shear William A 1986 The evolution of web building behavior in spiders a third generation of hypotheses In Shear William A ed Spiders webs behavior and evolution Stanford CA Stanford University Press pp 364 400 ISBN 978 0 8047 1203 3 a b c Coddington Jonathan A 1986 The monophyletic origin of the orb web In Shear William A ed Spiders webs behavior and evolution Stanford CA Stanford University Press pp 319 363 ISBN 978 0 8047 1203 3 Fernandez R Kallal R J Dimitrov D 2018 Phylogenomics diversification dynamics and comparative transcriptomics across the spider tree of life Current Biology 28 9 1489 1497 e5 doi 10 1016 j cub 2018 03 064 PMID 29706520 Garrison N Rodriguez L J Agnarsson I Coddington J A Griswold Charles E Hamilton C A Hedin M 2016 Spider phylogenomics untangling the spider tree of life PeerJ 4 e1719 doi 10 7717 peerj 1719 PMC 4768681 PMID 26925338 a b c d e Elgar Mark 1991 Sexual Cannibalism Size Dimorphism and Courtship Behavior in Orb Weaving Spiders Araneidae Evolution 45 2 444 448 doi 10 2307 2409679 JSTOR 2409679 PMID 28567867 a b Schneider J M Gilberg S Fromhage L amp Uhl G 2006 Sexual conflict over copulation duration in a cannibalistic spider Animal Behaviour 71 4 781 788 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2005 05 012 S2CID 53171331 Welke K W amp Schneider J M 2010 Males of the orb web spider Argiope bruennichi sacrifice themselves to unrelated females Biol Lett 6 5 585 588 doi 10 1098 rsbl 2010 0214 PMC 2936157 PMID 20410027 Gustavo H Scharff N amp Coddington J 2000 The Phylogenetic Basis of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Orb Weaving Spiders Araneae Orbiculariae Systematic Biology 49 3 435 462 doi 10 1080 10635159950127330 PMID 12116421 a b Legrand R S Morse D H 2000 Factors driving extreme sexual size dimorphism of a sit and wait predator under low density Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 71 4 643 664 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 2000 tb01283 x Elgar M A 1990 Sexual dimorphism in leg length among orb weaving spiders a possible role for sexual cannibalism Journal of Zoology London 220 3 455 470 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1990 tb04044 x Family Araneidae Clerck 1757 World Spider Catalog Natural History Museum Bern Retrieved 2022 12 08 Further reading EditCrompton John 1950 The Life of the Spider New York Mentor OCLC 610423670 Dondale C D Redner J H Paquin P Levi H W 2003 The Orb Weaving Spiders of Canada and Alaska Araneae Uloboridae Tetragnathidae Araneidae Theridiosomatidae Insects and Arachnids of Canada Vol 23 Ottawa NRC Research Press ISBN 978 0 660 18898 0 Kaston B J 1953 How to Know the Spiders Pictured key nature series 1st ed Dubuque IA W C Brown Co OCLC 681432632 Levi H W 1993 The new orb weaver genus Lewisepeira Araneae Araneidae Psyche 100 3 4 127 136 doi 10 1155 1993 97657 Main Barbara York 1976 Spiders Australian Naturalist Library 2nd ed Sydney Collins OCLC 849736139 Foelix Rainer F 1996 Biology of Spiders 2nd ed New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 509594 4 OCLC 300192823 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Araneidae Wikispecies has information related to Araneidae Spiders of Australia Spiders of northwestern Europe Araneae Arachnology Home Pages World Spider Catalog Orb weavers of Kentucky University of Kentucky Pictures of Mangora species Gasteracantha cancriformis spinybacked orbweaver on the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Featured Creatures website Neoscona crucifera and N domiciliorum on the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences Featured Creatures website HOE Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Orb weaver spider amp oldid 1133227890, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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