Association of a White-banded Jumping Spider 'Hypoblemum albovittatum' (Salticidae: Araneomorphae: Aranaea) with an Anemone Stinkhorn Fungus 'Aseroe rubra' (Phallaceae: Basidiomycota)

avondale-bepress-to-dspace.facultyScience
avondale-bepress.abstract<p>Scientists have carried out research on the sensory biology of spiders for well over a century with some interesting results. Spiders in general are known now to have a good variety and number of sensory receptors. Most spiders have eight eyes, which in some species give nearly 360 degrees vision, although other species have poor vision (e.g. Barth 2002; Framenau et al. 2014); cave-dwelling spiders may have little or no vision (Doran et al. 2001; Egan 2013; Framenau, et al. 2014). Certain spiders once were thought to be deaf (e.g. Pritchett 1904); but, some salticid spiders have a good sense of hearing, demonstrating an acoustic-triggered startle response (Shamble et al. 2016). The fact that some male salticids, e.g. Maratus species (Otto and Hill 2015), give remarkably colourful courtship displays suggests they have at least some degree of colour vision. This has been confirmed by several recent studies (e.g. Taylor 2016; Zurek et al. 2015). Salticid spiders are well-known to have elaborate vision-based predatory strategies (Cross et al. 2009; Zurek et al. 2015; Whyte and Anderson 2017). The giant-eyed Deinopidae species are also heavily dependent on vision for their net-casting behaviour (Whyte and Anderson, 2017). Spiders can discriminate between arthropod prey species, refusing to attack certain toxic species such as some cockroaches, butterflies and millipedes (pers. obs.; Vasconcellos-Neto and Lewinsohn 1984) suggesting they may have a sense of taste, although experiments by Toft (1999) suggest aversion memory is short-lived.</p>
avondale-bepress.articleid1106
avondale-bepress.authorsTerry J. Annable
avondale-bepress.context-key24801573
avondale-bepress.coverpage-urlhttps://research.avondale.edu.au/sci_math_papers/107
avondale-bepress.document-typearticle
avondale-bepress.field.author_faculty_disciplineScience
avondale-bepress.field.comments<p>Used by permission: the author.</p> <p>Staff and Students of Avondale College may access the full text of this article via a Avondale Library PRIMO search <a href="https://avondale-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/search?vid=AVN&lang=en_US">here</a>.</p>
avondale-bepress.field.custom_citation<p>Annable, T. J. (2017). Association of a white-banded jumping spider 'Hypoblemum albovittatum' (Salticidae: Araneomorphae: Aranaea) with an Anemone Stinkhorn Fungus 'Aseroe rubra' (Phallaceae: Basidiomycota). <em>The Victorian Naturalist, 134</em>(5), 150-152.</p>
avondale-bepress.field.doihttps://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.242016421708222
avondale-bepress.field.embargo_date2017-11-12T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.field.field_of_education01 Natural and Physical Sciences
avondale-bepress.field.for_20213104 Evolutionary biology
avondale-bepress.field.issn0042-5184
avondale-bepress.field.issue_number5
avondale-bepress.field.journalThe Victorian Naturalist
avondale-bepress.field.page_numbers150-152
avondale-bepress.field.publication_date2017-10-01T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.field.reportable_itemsC2
avondale-bepress.field.source_fulltext_urlhttps://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.242016421708222
avondale-bepress.field.staff_classificationConjoint
avondale-bepress.field.volume_number134
avondale-bepress.fulltext-urlhttps://research.avondale.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1106&amp;context=sci_math_papers&amp;unstamped=1
avondale-bepress.keywordsspiders
avondale-bepress.keywordswildlife conservation
avondale-bepress.keywordsnaturalists
avondale-bepress.label107
avondale-bepress.publication-date2017-10-01T00:00:00Z
avondale-bepress.publication-titleScience and Mathematics Papers and Journal Articles
avondale-bepress.statepublished
avondale-bepress.submission-date2021-09-12T21:55:12Z
avondale-bepress.submission-pathsci_math_papers/107
avondale-bepress.titleAssociation of a White-banded Jumping Spider 'Hypoblemum albovittatum' (Salticidae: Araneomorphae: Aranaea) with an Anemone Stinkhorn Fungus 'Aseroe rubra' (Phallaceae: Basidiomycota)
avondale-bepress.typearticle
dc.contributor.authorAnnable, Terry J.
dc.date.accessioned2023-11-01T00:33:48Z
dc.date.available2023-11-01T00:33:48Z
dc.date.issued2017-10-01
dc.date.submitted2021-09-12T21:55:12Z
dc.description.abstract<p>Scientists have carried out research on the sensory biology of spiders for well over a century with some interesting results. Spiders in general are known now to have a good variety and number of sensory receptors. Most spiders have eight eyes, which in some species give nearly 360 degrees vision, although other species have poor vision (e.g. Barth 2002; Framenau et al. 2014); cave-dwelling spiders may have little or no vision (Doran et al. 2001; Egan 2013; Framenau, et al. 2014). Certain spiders once were thought to be deaf (e.g. Pritchett 1904); but, some salticid spiders have a good sense of hearing, demonstrating an acoustic-triggered startle response (Shamble et al. 2016). The fact that some male salticids, e.g. Maratus species (Otto and Hill 2015), give remarkably colourful courtship displays suggests they have at least some degree of colour vision. This has been confirmed by several recent studies (e.g. Taylor 2016; Zurek et al. 2015). Salticid spiders are well-known to have elaborate vision-based predatory strategies (Cross et al. 2009; Zurek et al. 2015; Whyte and Anderson 2017). The giant-eyed Deinopidae species are also heavily dependent on vision for their net-casting behaviour (Whyte and Anderson, 2017). Spiders can discriminate between arthropod prey species, refusing to attack certain toxic species such as some cockroaches, butterflies and millipedes (pers. obs.; Vasconcellos-Neto and Lewinsohn 1984) suggesting they may have a sense of taste, although experiments by Toft (1999) suggest aversion memory is short-lived.</p>
dc.identifier.citation<p>Annable, T. J. (2017). Association of a white-banded jumping spider 'Hypoblemum albovittatum' (Salticidae: Araneomorphae: Aranaea) with an Anemone Stinkhorn Fungus 'Aseroe rubra' (Phallaceae: Basidiomycota). <em>The Victorian Naturalist, 134</em>(5), 150-152.</p>
dc.identifier.doihttps://search.informit.org/doi/10.3316/informit.242016421708222
dc.identifier.issn0042-5184
dc.identifier.urihttps://research.avondale.edu.au/handle/123456789/24801573
dc.language.isoen_us
dc.rights<p>Used by permission: the author.</p> <p>Staff and Students of Avondale College may access the full text of this article via a Avondale Library PRIMO search <a href="https://avondale-primo.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo-explore/search?vid=AVN&lang=en_US">here</a>.</p>
dc.subjectspiders
dc.subjectwildlife conservation
dc.subjectnaturalists
dc.titleAssociation of a White-banded Jumping Spider 'Hypoblemum albovittatum' (Salticidae: Araneomorphae: Aranaea) with an Anemone Stinkhorn Fungus 'Aseroe rubra' (Phallaceae: Basidiomycota)
dc.typeJournal Article
Files
Original bundle
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
Terry_Annable_Naturalist_Note_The_Victorian_Naturalist.pdf
Size:
336 KB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format