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Mechanics and Morphology of Silk Drawn from Anesthetized Spiders 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
CO2 and N2 anesthetized Nephila spiders produced dragline silk with mechanical properties that differed from control silk as a function of time under anesthesia.
Silk from CO2 spiders had a significantly lower breaking strain and breaking energy, significantly higher initial modulus, and marginally
lower breaking stress. At the onset of anesthesia the silk diameter became highly variable. During deep anesthesia silk either
became thinner or retained cross-section but fibrillated.
Received: 26 August 1999 / Accepted in revised form: 22 December 1999 相似文献
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Fritz Vollrath 《Behavioral ecology and sociobiology》1986,18(4):283-287
Summary Colonies of Anelosimus eximius in Panama had an average sex ratio of 0.15±sd 0.09, i.e. about five females for each male. The sex ratio in egg sacs reared was even lower (0.08±0.01), as was that of immatures in newly founded colonies (0.12±0.05). The possible mechanisms responsible are discussed. Mature colonies had an average ratio of 17 females and 2 males for each egg sac present (range: 2–91 females, 0.2–8.2 males) and contained a large proportion of females which were not inseminated but which presumably help. Since both sexes are diploid, arrhenotoky can be ruled out and it is assumed that some females do not come to reproduction, the proportion depending on the availability of resources. This mechanism may enable entire colonies to survive lean times. 相似文献
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Spiders are fascinating model species to study information-acquisition strategies, with the web acting as an extension of the animal’s body. Here, we compare the strategies of two orb-weaving spiders that acquire information through vibrations transmitted and filtered in the web. Whereas Araneus diadematus monitors web vibration directly on the web, Zygiella x-notata uses a signal thread to remotely monitor web vibration from a retreat, which gives added protection. We assess the implications of these two information-acquisition strategies on the quality of vibration information transfer, using laser Doppler vibrometry to measure vibrations of real webs and finite element analysis in computer models of webs. We observed that the signal thread imposed no biologically relevant time penalty for vibration propagation. However, loss of energy (attenuation) was a cost associated with remote monitoring via a signal thread. The findings have implications for the biological use of vibrations by spiders, including the mechanisms to locate and discriminate between vibration sources. We show that orb-weaver spiders are fascinating examples of organisms that modify their physical environment to shape their information-acquisition strategy. 相似文献
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The Science of Nature - 相似文献
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Understanding how mammals satisfy their need for space in fragmenting ecosystems is crucial for ecosystem conservation. Using state-of-the-art global positioning system (GPS) technology we tracked 11 focal African elephants (Loxodonta africana) in Kenya at 3-hourly fix intervals and collected between 34 and 406 days per individual. Our recordings gave a high spatio-temporal resolution compared to previous studies and allowed novel insights into range use. The actual ranges of the tracked elephants are smaller than usually represented. Moreover, the ranges in our sample were complex and not confined to officially designated protected areas, except where fenced. All the unfenced elephants in our sample had distinct home sectors linked by travel corridors. Within each home sector the elephants concentrated in favourite core zones. Such core zones tended to lie in protected areas whereas corridors typically crossed unprotected range. Elephants moved significantly faster along corridors than elsewhere in their range, which suggests awareness of danger outside the protected area. We conclude that understanding the complex use of an animals range is crucial for conservation planning aiming to balance animal interests with those of human beings that co-habit in their range.The revised version was published online in April 2005 with correction to figure 1a and b. 相似文献
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We studied the abilities of the garden cross spider Araneus diadematus regarding adaptation of web geometry to spatial constraints. Spiders reacted to a spatial reduction in their building site
from a square-shaped frame to a slimmer, rectangular frame (side ratio 1 : 2) by maintaining overall web geometry while reducing
the web area covered by the sticky capture spiral. However, when the frames were changed further to a rectangular side ratio
of 1 : 3, the spiders changed specific web properties in such a way that a further reduction in the capture spiral area was
prevented. Construction of the threads making up the web frame and the auxiliary spiral requires that the spider explores
the spatial constraints of its building site. The geometry of both frame and auxiliary spiral threads in turn determine the
geometry of the capture threads. Since in very narrow frames the spider adjusted the auxiliary to suit the subsequent capture
spiral, we suggest that an initial spatial survey led to the final adaptation of overall web geometry to a web site.
Received: 26 April 1999 / Accepted in revised form: 26 November 1999 相似文献
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