In the area surrounding Douglas Lake, horizontal webs, built by Pityohyphantes costatus (Hentz), and vertical webs, built by Tetrignatha straminea (Emerton), coexist. The objectives of this study are to determine if 1) there is a correlation between orientation of webs and the amount of prey captured at given heights and locations, 2) there is a difference between the kinds of prey caught by the two kinds of webs, and 3) there is a relation between the performance of each web type and their prevalence at certain sites. We answered these questions by comparing the amount and kind of prey captured by vertical and horizontal webs at two sites, a lake shore and a hillside. We compared these results to those of artificial webs which allowed u...
In the last decade there has been a renewed interest in the study of behavioural adaptations to envi...
The ideal free distribution (IFD) model predicts that consumers match the distribution of resources ...
Studies on spiders in their natural habitats are necessary for determining the full range of plastic...
Spider webs are divided into three major architectural groups: orb, sheet and tangle. This study exa...
Spider webs are a good example of how phenotypic traits can be adjustable to the physical structure ...
Analysis of orb webs of the garden cross spider (Araneus diadematus) showed that these vertical webs...
1. Web-location cannot be designed simply to optimize foraging success, but must be a compromise bet...
Arthropods are the most abundant phylum but the order Araneus (spiders) is one of the most abundant ...
Vertical asymmetry is a widespread feature of orb webs, with the lower part larger than the upper, a...
Almost all spiders building vertical orb webs face downwards when sitting on the hubs of their webs,...
The design of orb webs is affected by multiple abiotic (e.g., wind, available space), biotic (e.g., ...
Orb-web spiders build vertically asymmetric webs, in which the lower part is larger than the upper p...
The understanding of web-building behaviour in orb-web spiders has undergone several para-digm shift...
Abstract: Intensification of land-use in agricultural landscapes is responsible for a decline of bio...
Metabus gravidus (Araneidae: Araneae) is a parasocial orb-weaving spider. It lives in the forest und...
In the last decade there has been a renewed interest in the study of behavioural adaptations to envi...
The ideal free distribution (IFD) model predicts that consumers match the distribution of resources ...
Studies on spiders in their natural habitats are necessary for determining the full range of plastic...
Spider webs are divided into three major architectural groups: orb, sheet and tangle. This study exa...
Spider webs are a good example of how phenotypic traits can be adjustable to the physical structure ...
Analysis of orb webs of the garden cross spider (Araneus diadematus) showed that these vertical webs...
1. Web-location cannot be designed simply to optimize foraging success, but must be a compromise bet...
Arthropods are the most abundant phylum but the order Araneus (spiders) is one of the most abundant ...
Vertical asymmetry is a widespread feature of orb webs, with the lower part larger than the upper, a...
Almost all spiders building vertical orb webs face downwards when sitting on the hubs of their webs,...
The design of orb webs is affected by multiple abiotic (e.g., wind, available space), biotic (e.g., ...
Orb-web spiders build vertically asymmetric webs, in which the lower part is larger than the upper p...
The understanding of web-building behaviour in orb-web spiders has undergone several para-digm shift...
Abstract: Intensification of land-use in agricultural landscapes is responsible for a decline of bio...
Metabus gravidus (Araneidae: Araneae) is a parasocial orb-weaving spider. It lives in the forest und...
In the last decade there has been a renewed interest in the study of behavioural adaptations to envi...
The ideal free distribution (IFD) model predicts that consumers match the distribution of resources ...
Studies on spiders in their natural habitats are necessary for determining the full range of plastic...