Multiple feeding in wolf spiders: the effect of starvation on handling time, ingestion rate, and intercatch intervals in Lycosa lapidosa (Araneae : Lycosidae)
V. W. Framenau, L. A. Finley, K. Allan, M. Love, D. Shirley and M. A. Elgar
Australian Journal of Zoology 48(1) 59 - 65
Abstract
Multiple prey capture, the behaviour of a predator attacking prey whilst
handling a previously caught item, occurs in a variety of spiders that do not
build webs. The effects of recent feeding history on the frequency of multiple
prey attacks, handling time, ingestion rate, and intercatch intervals were
examined experimentally in the wolf spider
Lycosa lapidosa McKay. Juvenile spiders were subjected
to two different feeding regimes (starvation for 14 and 28 days) and then
provided with two different prey types (blowflies,
Lucilia cuprina, and crickets,
Acheta domestica). These two starvation levels or prey
types had little effect on the frequency (75%) of multiple prey
attacks. Spiders ingested approximately half the weight of any captured prey,
regardless of how many prey items they attacked. At the same time, the
handling time per prey item decreased with an increasing number of prey
attacked. This indicates a more efficient ingestion rate when more prey are
consumed. While the attacking time for the first prey was the same for all
treatments, the first intercatch interval was longer for spiders that were
starved longer. Chronically starved L. lapidosa appear
to secure a previously caught item rather than optimise their capture rate by
attacking further available prey.
Full text doi:10.1071/ZO99057
© CSIRO 2000





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