Saturday 15 September 2012

Are male false widow spiders ant mimics?

An adult male Common False Widow spider, Steatoda bipunctata, barely half a cm in size, scuttled across the kitchen floor yesterday, most likely in search of receptive females. As most spiders, males look quite different from females, but these do look peculiar due to their very large palps, which they carry together while they walk. It immediately reminded me of a garden ant. I googled 'ant mimic Steatoda' and got nowhere, and my reference books also drew a blank, although they noted the relatively large male palps. How can you tell if a spider is an ant mimic (a myrmecomorph)? Sometimes it is so hard to tell them apart the myrmecomorph even tricks ants themselves - which the spider can then predate easily. Other myrmecomorphs are content to trick birds or other common spider predators which find ants distasteful, and the resemblance then might not be so striking on close inspection. There are several recognised ant-mimic spiders in the UK, which are likely to have evolved to resemble the ubiquitous garden ant Lasius niger, a small (4-5 mm), dark brown to black ant (see previous post on Micaria pulicaria). In that post I referred to a list of morphological features that ant-mimics are likely to have evolved, devised by Paula Cushing, so I can check if my candidate ant mimic male Steatoda bipunctata meets them:

1. Body shape: three body segments. Spiders have two body segments so ant-mimics must evoke the three body segments of an ant (head, thorax, abdomen) The large palps of male Steatoda bipunctata, carried raised and together, appear to make the role of an 'ant head'. Check!
2. Three pairs of legs and one pair of antennae. I need to carry more observations on live individuals to assess how the front legs are carried, as ant mimics carry them forward and often raised.
3. Petiole or 'waist' of the ant. My spider has a strong constriction at the end of the cephalothorax reminiscent of the 'waist' between the thorax and the abdomen of the ant. Check!
4. Mandibles. Pointed palps, but not an obvious feafure of Lasius niger.
5. Pair of compound eyes. No clearly mimicked, but also not a very distinctive feature of L. niger.
6. Sting. Not normally visible in Lasius niger.
7. Thin body and legs. Check!
8. Shiny surface. Very shiny, waxy looking. Check!
9. Segmented abdomen.  Abdomen with bands that reflect light as the tergites in an ant abdomen, with a similar pubescence. Check!

Not bad, a clear 5 out of 9 ant-mimic features clearly by this species, and I must add that something missing from the list are the general size and colour, which in this case also fit the garden ant. That the male does resemble an ant more than the female could be explained by the fact that he is likely to be exposed to predation while he moves in search of females - who sit on their webs and would be unlikely to gain much from resembling an ant.
What do you think? 
Ant Lasius niger tending aphid
Top view of male Steatoda bipunctata

4 comments:

Cheri L. said...

I just found one of these trying to build a web between the sink and the faucet handle in the kitchen. I thought at first that it WAS an ant, as it's HUGE compared to all but one of the other spiders of this species that I've found in my house in the last year or so. (we're apparently a good breeding place for the False Widow spiders, as they keep popping up everywhere). I have him safely in a jar right next to my computer as we speak. I'm not sure where I'm going to relocate him to, since winter is rapidly approaching. Can you direct me to any other websites with more information on these nifty little nippers?

Xmegatron said...

I bought 2 NOBLE FALSE BLACK WIDOW SPIDERS from a spider breeder they where 20$ each the seller told me either one or both will grow into adult males now they're getting bigger and one has its color changing I can't wait. I aslo read they don't fight over territory like other male spiders they hold their arms out against the other males arms and test each others strength till one backs down there no killing there but if the other nmale tries to grapple him in a killing position then thats when he kills the others male.

Xmegatron said...

I meant thats when he kills the other male.

Xmegatron said...

Another thing the male (NOBLE FALSE BLACK WIDOW SPIDERđź‘‘) is extremely gentle with the female he keeps her calm by gently touching her and he stays with her for a long time and mates with her then at times she will get a little temperamental but he always can calm her down and she'll go to sleep. But then there comes the time when he can't calm her and she extremely aggressive then he leaves.