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Predator cues and an herbicide affect activity and emigration in an agrobiont wolf spider
Authors:Wrinn Kerri M  Evans Samuel C  Rypstra Ann L
Institution:a Department of Zoology, 212 Pearson Hall, Miami University, Oxford, OH 45056, United States
b Department of Zoology, Miami University, Hamilton, OH 45011, United States
c Science & Mathematics Division, Biology/Life Sciences, West Kentucky Community and Technical College, 4810 Alben Barkley Drive, PO Box 7380, Paducah, KY 42002, United States
d Department of Biology, 401 Auburn Science and Engineering Center, University of Akron, Akron, OH 44325, United States
Abstract:Animals use chemical cues for signaling between species. However, anthropogenic chemicals might interrupt this natural chemical information flow, with potential impacts on predator-prey interactions. Our goal was to explore how Buccaneer® Plus, a common herbicide similar to Round-up® (active ingredient glyphosate), affected the interactions between intraguild predators. The wolf spider Pardosa milvina (Hentz, 1844) is numerically dominant in agricultural systems across the eastern United States, and often falls prey to or competes with the larger wolf spider, Hogna helluo (Walckenaer, 1837) and/or the carabid beetle, Scarites quadriceps (Chaudoir, 1843). We tested the effects of chemical cues from these intraguild predators and exposure to herbicide on the activity, emigration, and survival of P. milvina using a full-factorial laboratory experiment. Both predator cues and herbicide led to a decrease in movement by P. milvina. However, although H. helluo cues alone decreased movement, S. quadriceps cues only decreased movement when combined with herbicide. These results indicate that predation risk and herbicide application likely interact in complex ways to affect the movement of a major arthropod predator in agricultural systems, and thus may have complex effects on the food web.
Keywords:Glyphosate  Predator cues  Wolf spider  Activity  Info-disrupters
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