Uloboridae Explained

Uloboridae is a family of non-venomous spiders, known as cribellate orb weavers or hackled orb weavers. Their lack of venom glands is a secondarily evolved trait. Instead, they wrap their prey thoroughly in silk, cover it in regurgitated digestive enzymes, and then ingest the liquified body.[1]

Description

They are medium to large spiders, with three claws, which lack venomous glands. They build a spiral web using cribellate silk, which is quite fuzzy. They are usually dull in color, and are able to camouflage well into their surroundings. They typically have a humped opisthosoma, which is notoriously more humped than the carapace. Their rear eyes tend to curve, more so in some species than others.[2]

Hunting

The hunting method of these spiders is quite unique among all animals in the kingdom. These spiders do not use an adhesive on their orb webs, but rather the very fine cribellate fibers on each strand of silk tend to ensnare prey.[3] Since newly hatched uloborids lack the cribellum needed to produce cribellate sticky silk, their webs have a fundamentally different structure with a large number of fine radii, but no sticky spiral.[4] Some spiders only build a single line web, while others make more complex webs. They lack venom glands, which is very rare among spiders. They first catch their prey, using their silk. They wrap their prey, and severely compress it, then they cover the prey with digestive fluid. Oddly enough, their mouthparts never touch the prey. The spider starts ingesting as soon as the prey has been covered. It is thought that robust hairs protect the spider from the digestive fluids.[5] It is unknown how this behavior first evolved.

Social behavior

Some species are able to form colonies like Philoponella republicana, which make large, messy, communal webs. Colonies may range from a couple of individuals to a couple hundred. These colonies may be nymph dominated or adult dominated, though a small colony dominated by adults could be a sign of the colony's slow death. These colonies show signs of being female dominated, as one would expect, with males only being found in larger colonies. This could mean males search for larger colonies, or had died out in the smaller colonies.[6]

Distribution

This family has an almost worldwide distribution. Only two species are known from Northern Europe: Uloborus walckenaerius and Hyptiotes paradoxus. Similarly occurring solely in northern North America (e.g. southern Ontario) is Uloborus glomosus. The oldest known fossil species is Talbragaraneus from the Late Jurassic (Tithonian) Talbragar Fossil Bed of Australia.[7]

Genera

See main article: List of Uloboridae species., the World Spider Catalog accepts the following genera:[8]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Staff Scientists.
  2. Web site: 2022 . Hackled orb-weavers . 2022-09-26 . The Australian Museum . en.
  3. Hawthorn . Anya C. . Opell . Brent D. . 2002 . Evolution of adhesive mechanisms in cribellar spider prey capture thread: evidence for van der Waals and hygroscopic forces . Biological Journal of the Linnean Society . 77 . 1 . 1–8 . en . 10.1046/j.1095-8312.2002.00099.x. free .
  4. Eberhard . William G. . Zschokke . Samuel . 2022 . The primary webs of Uloboridae (Araneae) . Journal of Arachnology . 50 . 3 . 335–350 . en . 10.1636/JoA-S-22-001. 253876504 .
  5. Weng . J.-L. . Barrantes . G. . Eberhard . W. G. . 2007-01-09 . Feeding by Philoponella vicina (Araneae, Uloboridae) and how uloborid spiders lost their venom glands . Canadian Journal of Zoology . 84 . 12 . 1752–1762 . en . 10.1139/z06-149. 10669/79093 . free .
  6. Sewlal . Jo-Anne N. . 2014-12-31 . Observations of Colonies and Responses to Disturbance by the Uloborid Spider Philoponella republicana (Araneae: Uloboridae) at Simla Research Station, Trinidad and Tobago . Living World, Journal of the Trinidad and Tobago Field Naturalists' Club . en . 57–58 . 1029-3299.
  7. Selden. Paul A.. Beattie. Robert G.. June 2013. A spider fossil from the Jurassic Talbragar Fossil Fish Bed of New South Wales. Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 37. 2. 203–208. 10.1080/03115518.2013.735072. 2013Alch...37..203S . 55113970. 0311-5518.
  8. Web site: Family: Uloboridae Thorell, 1869. World Spider Catalog. 2019-04-26. Natural History Museum Bern.