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Open Access Article << Previous     |     Next >>   Contents Vol 47(1)

Foraging behaviour and the risk of predation in the black house spider, Badumna insignis (Desidae)

Robbie J. Henderson and Mark A. Elgar

Australian Journal of Zoology 47(1) 29 - 35
Published: 1999

Abstract

Many animals adjust their behaviour according to the presence or threat of predators. However, the foraging behaviour of sit-and-wait predators is typically thought to be inflexible to short-term changes in the environment. Here we investigate the foraging behaviour of the nocturnally active black house spider, Badumna insignis. Experiments in which different kinds of prey were introduced into the web during either the day or night indicated that the foraging success of Badumna is compromised by behaviours that reduce the risk of predation. During the day, spiders generally remain within the retreat and take longer to reach the prey, which may reduce their foraging success. In contrast, spiders sat exposed at the edge of the retreat at night, and from here could usually reach the prey before it escaped. The spiders were able to escape from a model predator more rapidly if they were at the edge of the retreat than if they were out on the web. These data suggest that the costs to Badumna of reduced fecundity through poor foraging efficiency may be outweighed by the benefits of reducing the risk of predation



Full text doi:10.1071/ZO98060

© CSIRO 1999

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