Habitat use in an assemblage of Central American wandering spiders
The sympatric occurrence of species is thought to be based mainly on the differences in their use of habitat and of limiting resources. Segregating parameters may be of spatial or temporal character and may include behavioral differences. We hypothesized that species of large hunting spider living s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of arachnology 2013-08, Vol.41 (2), p.151-159 |
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description | The sympatric occurrence of species is thought to be based mainly on the differences in their use of habitat and of limiting resources. Segregating parameters may be of spatial or temporal character and may include behavioral differences. We hypothesized that species of large hunting spider living sympatrically in a Costa Rican lowland rain forest should differ in their habitat and/or hunting microhabitat preferences, in daily activity pattern, and, as an adaptation to the preferred hunting microhabitat, in their specific ability to adhere to smooth surfaces. We found an assemblage of eight large species of the families Ctenidae and Trechaleidae, consisting of three subguilds: 1) two semi-aquatic species with low adhesion ability, 2) three forest-floor dwelling species with good adhesion ability, and 3) three vegetation dwelling species showing very good adhesion ability. The species were partially segregated by habitat type, with two of the vegetation dwelling species preferring the treeless area of a temporary swamp. We found no species-specific differences in daily activity patterns. The similarity in community structure between this Costa Rican and a central Amazonian assemblage suggests the existence of similar structuring mechanisms in wandering spider assemblages in climatically similar biomes. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1636/P11-88.1 |
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Segregating parameters may be of spatial or temporal character and may include behavioral differences. We hypothesized that species of large hunting spider living sympatrically in a Costa Rican lowland rain forest should differ in their habitat and/or hunting microhabitat preferences, in daily activity pattern, and, as an adaptation to the preferred hunting microhabitat, in their specific ability to adhere to smooth surfaces. We found an assemblage of eight large species of the families Ctenidae and Trechaleidae, consisting of three subguilds: 1) two semi-aquatic species with low adhesion ability, 2) three forest-floor dwelling species with good adhesion ability, and 3) three vegetation dwelling species showing very good adhesion ability. The species were partially segregated by habitat type, with two of the vegetation dwelling species preferring the treeless area of a temporary swamp. We found no species-specific differences in daily activity patterns. The similarity in community structure between this Costa Rican and a central Amazonian assemblage suggests the existence of similar structuring mechanisms in wandering spider assemblages in climatically similar biomes.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0161-8202</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1937-2396</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1636/P11-88.1</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Lubbock, Tex., American Arachnological Society: American Arachnological Society</publisher><subject>Activity patterns ; Adhesion ; Araneae ; Coexistence ; community structure ; Ctenidae ; ecosystems ; Environmental aspects ; FEATURED ARTICLES ; Folktales ; Forest habitats ; forest litter ; habitat preference ; Habitat preferences ; Habitat selection ; Hunting ; Microhabitats ; natural prey ; niche ; Niche (Ecology) ; rain forests ; Species ; Spiders ; surfaces ; swamps ; sympatry ; Trechaleidae ; Tropical rain forests ; Vegetation ; Zoological research</subject><ispartof>The Journal of arachnology, 2013-08, Vol.41 (2), p.151-159</ispartof><rights>The American Arachnological Society</rights><rights>COPYRIGHT 2013 The American Arachnological Society</rights><rights>In Copyright. 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Segregating parameters may be of spatial or temporal character and may include behavioral differences. We hypothesized that species of large hunting spider living sympatrically in a Costa Rican lowland rain forest should differ in their habitat and/or hunting microhabitat preferences, in daily activity pattern, and, as an adaptation to the preferred hunting microhabitat, in their specific ability to adhere to smooth surfaces. We found an assemblage of eight large species of the families Ctenidae and Trechaleidae, consisting of three subguilds: 1) two semi-aquatic species with low adhesion ability, 2) three forest-floor dwelling species with good adhesion ability, and 3) three vegetation dwelling species showing very good adhesion ability. The species were partially segregated by habitat type, with two of the vegetation dwelling species preferring the treeless area of a temporary swamp. We found no species-specific differences in daily activity patterns. 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Segregating parameters may be of spatial or temporal character and may include behavioral differences. We hypothesized that species of large hunting spider living sympatrically in a Costa Rican lowland rain forest should differ in their habitat and/or hunting microhabitat preferences, in daily activity pattern, and, as an adaptation to the preferred hunting microhabitat, in their specific ability to adhere to smooth surfaces. We found an assemblage of eight large species of the families Ctenidae and Trechaleidae, consisting of three subguilds: 1) two semi-aquatic species with low adhesion ability, 2) three forest-floor dwelling species with good adhesion ability, and 3) three vegetation dwelling species showing very good adhesion ability. The species were partially segregated by habitat type, with two of the vegetation dwelling species preferring the treeless area of a temporary swamp. We found no species-specific differences in daily activity patterns. The similarity in community structure between this Costa Rican and a central Amazonian assemblage suggests the existence of similar structuring mechanisms in wandering spider assemblages in climatically similar biomes.</abstract><cop>Lubbock, Tex., American Arachnological Society</cop><pub>American Arachnological Society</pub><doi>10.1636/P11-88.1</doi><tpages>9</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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source | JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals |
subjects | Activity patterns Adhesion Araneae Coexistence community structure Ctenidae ecosystems Environmental aspects FEATURED ARTICLES Folktales Forest habitats forest litter habitat preference Habitat preferences Habitat selection Hunting Microhabitats natural prey niche Niche (Ecology) rain forests Species Spiders surfaces swamps sympatry Trechaleidae Tropical rain forests Vegetation Zoological research |
title | Habitat use in an assemblage of Central American wandering spiders |
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