Semiochemicals from froth of egg pods attract ovipositing female Schistocerca gregaria
Publication Type
Journal Article
Journal Name
Journal of Arachnology
Publication Date
7-1-2015
Abstract
Many spiders eat mosquitoes, but a spider is not automatically a mosquito specialist if it eats mosquitoes, or even if it primarily eats mosquitoes. Instead, specialization pertains to predators being adaptively fine tuned to specific types of prey. It is important to keep this basic meaning of specialization conceptually distinct from diet breadth (stenophagy versus euryphagy), adaptive trade-offs and other sister topics. Here we review the biology of Evarcha culicivora Wesolowska & Jackson 2003 and Paracyrba wanlessi Żabka & Kovac 1996 (Salticidae), two spider species that can be characterized, in their own individual ways, as being mosquito specialists. However, simply calling these species mosquito specialists can be misleading. Details matter, with some of the most important of these details pertaining to the different ways E. culicivora and P. wanlessi classify mosquitoes. The way these species classify, and specialize on, mosquitoes includes fine-tuned prey-choice behavior, special feature-detection mechanisms, deployment of selective attention and other behavioral and cognitive capacities that can be understood only on the basis of appropriately designed experiments.
Keywords
Evarcha culicivora, Paracyrba wanlessi, predatory versatility, Preferences, Salticidae, search images, trade-offs
Recommended Citation
Jackson, R., & Cross, F. (2015). Semiochemicals from froth of egg pods attract ovipositing female Schistocerca gregaria. Journal of Arachnology, 43 (2), 123-142. https://doi.org/10.1636/V15-28