Abstract

Evarcha culicivora, a salticid spider from East Africa, is a mosquito specialist which feeds indirectly on vertebrate blood by actively choosing blood-carrying mosquitoes as preferred prey and by actively choosing Anopheles as preferred mosquitoes. Here we investigate for the first time whether specialization by this predator is also expressed in the timing of its predatory activity. With data from field sampling and from systematically observing E. culicivora under semi-field conditions, we show that instances of predation tend to be most common in the early morning hours, this being when especially many night-feeding anthropophilic anopheline mosquitoes are resting while digesting blood acquired during the night. Experimental data show that E. culicivora is significantly more responsive to prey in the morning than in the afternoon, where ‘responsive’ includes being significantly more inclined to eat living prey, choose the preferred prey, approach a source of prey odor in the absence of visible prey and approach lures made from dead prey that can be seen but not touched or smelled. We found no significant diel pattern in E. culicivora’s inclination to mate and, although mate, plant and human odors are all known to be salient to E. culicivora, we found no significant diel pattern in response to any of these odors. Our findings suggest that E. culicivora’s innate pattern of predatory activity is adaptively adjusted in a way that facilitates predation on its preferred prey.

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