The role of learning in risk-avoidance strategies during spider-ant interactions
Por: Hénaut, Yann. Doctor [autor/a].
Machkour M'Rabet, Salima [autor/a] | Lachaud, Jean Paul [autor/a].
Tipo de material: ArtículoTema(s): Hormigas | Telarañas | Depredación | Nephila clavipes | Ectatomma tuberculatumTema(s) en inglés: Ants | Spider webs | Predation | Nephila clavipes | Ectatomma tuberculatumNota de acceso: Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso En: Animal Cognition. volumen 17, número 2 (Mar. 2014), páginas 185-195. --ISSN: 1435-9448Número de sistema: 50140Resumen:Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
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Artículos | Biblioteca Electrónica Recursos en línea (RE) | ECOSUR | Recurso digital | ECO400501407984 |
Disponible para usuarios de ECOSUR con su clave de acceso
Cognitive abilities used by arthropods, particularly predators, when interacting in a natural context have been poorly studied. Two neotropical sympatric predators, the golden silk spider Nephila clavipes and the ectatommine ant Ectatomma tuberculatum, were observed in field conditions where their interactions occurred regularly due to the exploitation of the same patches of vegetation. Repeated presentations of E. tuberculatum workers ensnared in their web triggered a progressive decrease in the capture response of N. clavipes. All the spiders that stopped trying to catch the ant on the second and/or third trial were individuals that had been bitten during a previous trial. Behavioural tests in natural field conditions showed that after a single confrontation with ant biting, spiders were able to discriminate this kind of prey more quickly from a defenceless prey (fruit flies) and to selectively and completely suppress their catching response. This one-trial aversive learning was still effective after 24 h. Likewise, E. tuberculatum workers entangled once on a N. clavipes web and having succeeded in escaping, learned to escape more quickly, breaking through the web by preferentially cutting spiral threads (sticky traps) rather than radial threads (stronger structural unsticky components) or pursuing the cutting of radials but doing it more quickly. Both strategies, based on a one-trial learning capability, obviously minimize the number of physical encounters between the two powerful opponents and may enhance their fitness by diminishing the risk of potential injuries resulting from predatory interactions. eng
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