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New Zealand Journal of Zoology abstracts


Trial-and-error derivation of aggressive-mimicry signals by Brettus and Cyrba, spartaeine jumping spiders (Araneae: Salticidae) from Israel, Kenya, and Sri Lanka

Robert R. Jackson

Department of Zoology
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch, New Zealand
email: r.jackson@zool.canterbury.ac.nz

Abstract  Brettus adonis, Brettus albolimbatus, Cyrba algerina, Cyrba ocellata, and Cyrba simoni are spartaeine jumping spiders (Salticidae) that invade other spiders’ webs, make vibratory signals that deceive the resident spider (aggressive mimicry), then attack and eat the spider. The signal-generation behaviour of each of these five species is investigated in the laboratory. Each species is characterised by flexible predatory behaviour, including use of a trial-and-error (generate-and-test) algorithm to derive appropriate aggressive-mimicry signals: first broadcast an array of different signals, then choose particular signals as a consequence of feedback from the prey spider. However, in laboratory experiments, B. adonis and B. albolimbatus relied on trial-and-error significantly more often than did C. algerina, C. ocellata, and C. simoni. Maternal effects and variation in experience were minimised because all individuals tested were laboratory-reared to the second and third generation under standardised conditions. Selection pressures that may have been responsible for evolution of different levels of flexibility are considered.

Keywords  spiders; Salticidae; aggressive mimicry; predation; cognition

Z01001 Received 8 January 2001; accepted 17 January 2002
New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 2002, Vol. 29: 95–117
0301–4223/02/2902–0095 $7.00/0 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2002

PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (120K) | screen-quality (83K)


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