Small jumping species steals lunch from ants.

LUNCH, SANS WEBThis spider is one in what may be the first-known population of vegetarian spiders. The herbivores live on acacia trees in Mexico and steal leafy snacks, such as the tree nubbin this spider holds, from their ant neighbors. Full story.R. Curry A little eight-legged pickpocket that darts around acacia trees
could be the first known vegetarian spider.
Bagheera kiplingi belongs among the big-eyed, athletic
predators in the family of
jumping spiders and gets its name from a panther in a Rudyard Kipling story. Yet
a population of these spiders in Mexico
mostly eats bits of the acacia trees, says Christopher Meehan of Villanova University
in Pennsylvania.
A few other spider species do taste vegetable matter now and
then, says Yael Lubin of Ben-Gurion University
in Sede Boqer, Israel. Male crab spiders that
spend their brief mating-oriented adult lives sitting on flowers will sip
nectar for a little energy boost. And some baby spiders eat spores that have
stuck to a web. But on hearing about spiders specializing in stealing
vegetarian food, “I was absolutely floored,” Lubin says.
These arachnid herbivores are no wimps. “The tree is full of
biting, vicious ant guards,” Meehan said during the 12th International
Behavioral Ecology Congress meeting August 9 through 15 at Cornell University.
The little spider spends its life dodging patrols of ants and stealing their
(vegetarian) lunches.
Acacia trees and their resident ants have become a textbook
example of a mutually beneficial partnership. Tree thorns grow swollen bases
the right size to shelter ants. Glands at the base of the leaves ooze nectar, far
from flowers but just at the spot to offer refreshment for ants. Acacia leaflet
tips sprout nubbins of protein and fat suitable for ant snacks.
Certain ant species take full advantage of these comforts
and defend their home trees against all comers. In the course of their vigilance,
the ants get rid of caterpillars and other invaders that might chew on the
tree.
Meehan says the spiders manage to dodge the ants, perching
on leaf tips and nesting in mature leaves, which aren’t as heavily patrolled as
other tree parts.
Ecologists have studied the partnership for years, but “people
who look at ant acacias — they look at the ants,” Lubin says. “It took the eyes of a
student naturalist to see this.”
That fresh observer was Meehan, who, along with his Villanova
colleague Robert Curry, noticed the spiders dining on the leafy snacks of
acacias in Mexico.
In videos of 140 spider meals, the researchers counted 136 acacia protein-fat
snacks with a few nectar sips. On four occasions the spiders did turn to meat
as they tugged away ant larvae from a passing nursemaid and ate the youngsters.
In Costa Rica,
the spiders also steal ant food, though to a lesser extent, according to
observations from Eric Olson of Brandeis
University. He
independently discovered the spiders eating tree snacks in Costa Rica in 2001 and is working
with the Villanova team on a report on the species.
Those meat moments don’t happen often, according to studies
done in collaboration with Matt Reudink of Queen’s University in Kingston, Canada.
The team checked spider tissue for the heavier form of nitrogen, N15, which
becomes more concentrated as animals eat animals that have eaten other animals.
That carnivore signal does not show up in the acacia-tree
spiders, which carry a relatively light concentration of N15, one that is typical
of plant-eaters, according to the team’s data. The researchers also found that the
concentration of the heavier form of carbon, C13, also looks typical for a
vegetarian.
Found in: Biology and Life
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