Locomotor behavior of wolf spiders in the paramo
收藏DataONE2023-08-01 更新2024-06-15 收录
下载链接:
https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:2d00c4f7527563838998b733695022273c4df7f1593bbed3b537ec6e7685de56
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
Ectothermic animals depend on ambient temperature to regulate internal temperature. This dependence affects their ecology and behavior, including locomotion, foraging, and reproduction. Additionally, ectotherms are more vulnerable in environments with extreme hourly temperature fluctuations, and their activity patterns likely match those of favorable temperatures. Here, we studied Pardosa wolf spiders (Lycosidae) in the highland tropical paramos of Costa Rica. We tested two hypotheses to elucidate the drivers of variation in locomotor behavior. First, we tested if locomotor behavior is driven by temperature variation. Spiders experimentally exposed to higher temperatures (30°C) moved 3.96 times faster than those exposed to lower temperatures (7°C). Second, we tested if locomotor behavior is modulated by the maternal care strategy of these spiders. Females carry an egg sac externally by holding it with the distal spinnerets. The egg sac can represent up to 36% of the spider's body size. ..., We ran locomotor behavior trials in which we tested the relative velocity of female wolf spiders of Pardosa sp. (Araneae: Lycosidae). Spiders were experimentally subjected to cold or heat conditions, and we measured their velocity afterward. A portion of those females was carrying an external egg sac that represented up to ~1/3 of their body size. This allowed us to test the effect of carrying that object on their speed.
We conducted this fieldwork in the highland paramo environment of Costa Rica.  ,
创建时间:
2025-07-14



