Image: Pen Araneae |
Twig-like Feather-legged Spiders are members of a genus called Miagrammopes and they look a bit like twigs. Of all things!
Image: Pen Araneae |
Image: Frank Starmer |
Image: spiderman (Frank) |
But by assuming the proper position, and with the correct green or brown colouration, they easily disappear into the surrounding foliage. Or at the very least succeed in looking nothing like a spider. Which is quite an achievement for a spider! It can't be easy for something with eight legs to make itself look like it has no legs.
Image: Robert Whyte www.arachne.org.au |
Twig-like Feather-legged Spiders have a strange way of catching prey. It involves just ONE strand of silk!
Image: Pen Araneae This is a spider web |
Now the spider must go about immobilising their prey before they can tuck in. Here's the problem: Twig-like Feather-legged Spiders are in the family Uloboridae, the Hackled Orb Spiders. This means two, big things:
First, that one strand of silk used to catch the fly wasn't sticky, because Hackled Orb Spiders don't produce sticky silk. "Hackled" silk is sort of woolly and fuzzy, instead. It traps prey by snagging them, not sticking them.
Image: Robert Whyte www.arachne.org.au Comb on the hind legs |
So when I said ONE strand of silk, I meant one strand of silk made up of THOUSANDS of tiny strands of silk.
Image: plj.johnny/潘立傑 Munching on a little something |
So how will our Twig-like Feather-legged Spider eat her meal in peace? The answer is silk. Lots and lots of silk.
Uloborids spend a long time smothering their prey in huge amounts of silk. There are some who can spend an hour cocooning their prey in over 100 metres of silk! This means their prey is not only well and truly cocooned and entombed, but it's also suffocated and crushed.
Most spiders would now put on their napkin and inject digestive enzymes to prepare their meal. Uloborids don't do this, they simply slather and slobber those enzymes all over their squished up food parcel and then slurp up the nastiness. Turns out poison and injections are the polite way of doing things.
So much for death... what about life?
Image: Frank Starmer A mating pair? |
Image: 小工友 Mother and egg sac |
So it seeme Twig-like Feather-legged Spiders are twig-like at conception, twig-like in the egg and twig-like throughout life. The twig-likeness only stops when it's time to kill, which must be extremely annoying for all those insects that get killed and eaten. If only it could act like twig just this ONE MORE TIME! Oh, well.
2 comments:
just when you think you know a spider... funky!
It's always nice when they're even weirder in detail!
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