This yellow garden spider (Argiope aurantia) has made her stabilimenta from silk. In fact, she looks to have gone overboard. One study has revealed that spiders who employ stabilimenta suffer a 34% reduction in the efficacy of their webs, though their webs are far less likely to get knocked down. It's a trade off, you see. It's kind of like how we humans will use orange safety cones or flares or reflective vests to alert drivers to the presence of humans in traffic lanes.
But not all stabilimenta are spun from silk. Other spiders (the use of stabilimenta is considered by some to have developed independantly among many different spider species) use egg sacs or even detritus to warn passersby of the presence of their webs. It's like how I use my body odor and constant barrage of not-so-funny jokes to alert my coworkers of my presence.
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not to be a total douche but that's an argiope trifasciata, not argiope aurantia.
ReplyDeleteRebekah, though I can't contribute much to any discussion regarding total or partial douches, I'm always grateful for a correction. The photographer identified it as an Argiope aurantia.
ReplyDeleteThe spider is nearly invisible between all those web lines...
ReplyDeleteA doodling spider...very cool!
ReplyDeleteDo you think it's possible that if you left certain kinds of detritus lying around, they would incorporate it into their stabilimenta? Kind of like how birds will pick up pieces of thread and weave them into their nests? It would be neat to see a web made with stuff I put out for them.
ReplyDeleteI like the idea, Size. Only one way to find out if it'll work...
ReplyDelete