Pisaura mirabilis

Nursery web spider
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Family: Pisauridae
Genus: Pisaura
Species: P. mirabilis
Binomial name
Pisaura mirabilis
(Clerck, 1757)
Female carrying egg sack
Female Pisaura mirabilis

The nursery web spider Pisaura mirabilis is a spider species of the family Pisauridae.

It was described in chapter 5 of the book Svenska Spindlar by the Swedish arachnologist and entomologist Carl Alexander Clerck.

Description

Striking characteristics of the Pisaura mirabilis are its long legs (the fourth one being the longest) and its slender abdomen (opisthosoma). The male is between 1013 mm, while the female is 1215 mm.[1] After final ecdysis the male spiders weigh on average 54 mg and females 68 mg.

The prosoma is variable in color, ranging from light to reddish brown and from gray to black. A lighter stripe is visible down the middle of the prosoma. The opisthosoma is long and narrow and tapered towards the rear end.

Female spiders have a dark patch (epigyne) on the underside of their abdomen that includes the copulatory organs. Male genital openings can be found at the same location, but remain inconspicuous.

Patterning and coloration varies due to polymorphism.[2][3][4] These patterns, which can be caused by hair and pigments, change with the growth of the spider (ontogenesis).[5]

Male spiders are stronger in contrast than females and look black, especially in comparison to the white nuptial gifts. Females tend to get paler towards the end of summer. The stripe along the back of the body can be found in all spiders and can be seen as crypsis, a protective measure against predators.

Pisaura mirabilis

The pedipalps in nymphs and females look similar to legs. In males, this structure gets thicker towards the end and is used to store sperm until reproduction (bulbus). The outer chelicerae segment consists of three teeth. They catch their prey during the day and at night and are also active on warm winter days.

Habitat and Distribution

Pisaura mirabilis can be found all over Europe. According to Blandin (1976)[6][7] these spiders inhabit the Canary Islands and Madeira, the Asian part of Russia, China and North Africa.

P. mirabilis live in all habitats, but prefer wet environments, like wet meadows, lowland moors, salt marshes, dunes, the edge of forests and wet hedges. They inhabit all stratas, from the ground to the top of trees, but aren’t found under rocks or in caves. These spiders can be found at altitudes up to 1500m.

Life cycle

The spider develops from a fertilised egg inside a cocoon into an embryo. After inversion, the embryo enters the prelarval stage. A couple of hours later, the pre-larvae moults into a larvae.[8] At this stage the spider is colorless but mobile and can detect sensory signals from its surrounding. They don't have any eyes yet and their cheliceraes are short and sharp. A few fine hairs can be found on their feet.

Depending on the temperature, the larvae moults after 4.5 - 7.5 days into the first nymphal stage. Once leaving the cocoon through an opening, they live in a protective web made by the mother, where they feed off the leftover yolk from their eggs and drink from water droplets. After about a week the nymphs start suspending themselves from their own spider silk and start preying on fruit flies. This usually happens in the sixth or seventh nymphal stage. Cannibalism doesn't occur in the first few days, but occurs in later stages. The whole nymphal stage is divided into twelve stages at most. Male spiders become sexually mature in the 9. - 11. stage, females in the 10. - 12. stage. Temperature can influence the development and number of stages, with colder temperatures slowing down the process. Under good conditions, spiders can complete their nymphal development in less than 12 stages.[9] The duration from prelarval stage to final moult (maturity) lasts 257 days for males (stage 10) and 289 days for females (stage 11). Adulthood is the period after final moult till death. Females live longer than males, the record being 247 days for females and 186.5 days for males.

Depending on habitat, nursery web spiders hibernate once or twice during the nymphal stage. The period of hibernation (diapause) is spent in ground vegetation under leaves, moss and stones. They can be found in garages and houses as well. Some individuals in the south of France have been found under loose bark of the plane tree. The nymphs in stages 6 – 8 start hibernating in November and continue with their development towards the end of February/beginning of March.

P. mirabilis in west- and central Europe reach sexual maturity in May, when sperm uptake, the search for females, offering of nuptial gifts, courtship and mating takes place. In northern and eastern Europe spiders reach sexual maturity only in June, while in southern Europe they become sexually mature in April.

Nursery web spiders have a one-year annual cycle in southern Europe. They grow in summer, hibernate in winter, reach adulthood in spring, reproduce and then die in autumn. Their offspring will be sexually mature in the following spring. Spiders from the north have a two-year cycle, having to go through two hibernations before reaching sexual maturity. Spiders in west- and central Europe, have a mix of both one and two year cycles. Males have a two-month period to reproduce, females three and a half.

Mating system

Males of this species offer a nuptial gift to potential female mates. Some Pisaura mirabilis have also been observed to use thanatosis during courtship.[10] After presenting the nuptial gift to the female she bites on to the gift and the male moves to her epigyne to deposit sperm with his pedipalps. Throughout copulation the male keeps a leg on the gift so as to be ready if she tries to escape with it or attack him. At this time the male may feign death his limbs become straight and he is dragged along with the female while holding on to the gift. When the female stops the male will slowly "resurrect" and continue attempting to mate.[10] Thanatosis in Pisaura mirabilis has been observed to significantly increase the male's odds of successfully copulating from less than 30% to 89%.[10][11]

Predators, Parasites and Pathogens

Predators of P. mirabilis includes spider wasps, tree frogs, lizards and song birds during the day and toads, shrew mice and bats at night. Other spider species, as well as from the same species (cannibalism), consider P. mirabilis as prey.

Nursery web spiders are often parasitised by nematodes, sphecoid wasps and chalcid wasps as well as other parasitic wasps and acari. These parasites infect the spider as well as its eggs and cocoons, which can lead to destruction of a whole clutch of eggs.

Baculovirus and rickettsia infect nursery web spiders as well. They most likely enter the gastrointestinal tract via the spiders prey. Not only can nymphs and adults be infected, but different stages in the cocoon as well.

Further reading

Films

References

  1. "Pisaura mirabilis". Retrieved 2009-02-10.
  2. Carl Wilhelm Hahn (Hrsg.: Peter Sacher), Monographie der Spinnen (1820-1836) - Mit einem Kommentar in deutsch und englisch herausgegeben von Peter Sacher, Reprint der Orig.-Ausg. Nürnberg 1820-1836, Zentralantiquariat der DDR, Leipzig 1988, S. 1-143, ISBN 3-7463-0080-0, hier S. 67 (unter "Dolomodes mirabilis, Walkenaer"), S. 71, Tafel 18 (unter „Dolomedes mirabilis, Walkenaer“)
  3. Carl Wilhelm Hahn, Die Arachniden - Getreu nach der Natur abgebildet und beschrieben, Zweiter Band, C. H. Zeh'sche Buchhandlung, Nürnberg 1834, hier S. 35 [Originalexemplar von Oxford University, digitalisiert am 10. Mai 2006 (Google), URL: http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA35&id=rxEAAAAAQAAJ&hl=de&output=html oder http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA35&id=rxEAAAAAQAAJ&hl=de, abgerufen am 15.I.2008 über "Google Buchsuche"]
  4. W. Bösenberg, Die Spinnen Deutschlands, Zoologica - Original-Abhandlungen aus dem Gesamtgebiete der Zoologie, 14 [1901-1903], (35), Fünfte und sechste Lieferung [1903], Nägele, Stuttgart 1903, S. 385-465, hier S. 410
  5. Rupert Aechter, Untersuchungen über die Zeichnung und Färbung der Araneen unter Berücksichtigung der Ontogenese und Phylogenie, Sitzungsberichte - Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften - Mathematisch-naturwissenschaftliche Klasse - Abteilung I, 164, (8), 1955, S. 545-606, hier v. a. S. 545-606, 591-593
  6. P. Blandin: Etudes sur les Pisauridae africaines. I-XI. Rev. Suisse Zool. 81, Rev. Zool. afr. 89-93, 1974-1979
  7. P. Blandin: Cycle biologique et production de l'araignée Afropisaura valida (Simon 1885)(Araneae, Pisauridae) dans une savane d'Afrique occidentale (Lamto, Côte-d'Ivoire). Trop. Ecol. 20: 78-93, 1974
  8. Foelix, Rainer (2010). Biology of Spiders. Oxford University Press. p. 270.
  9. Nentwig, Wolfgang (2012). Ecophysiology of Spiders. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 333.
  10. 1 2 3 Hansen, S. H., Gonzalez S. F., Toft, S., & Bilde, T. (2008). Thanatosis as an adaptive male mating strategy in the nuptial gift-giving spider Pisaura mirabilis. Behavioral Ecology 19: 546-551. doi:10.1093/beheco/arm165
  11. "Spiders play dead to get laid". New Scientist magazine (2645). February 27, 2008. p. 19.
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See also

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