Abstract

AbstractWeb-building spiders (e.g. Frontinella communis and Neriene radiata) and northern pitcher plants (Sarracenia purpurea) are co-occurring sit-and-wait predators that may compete for shared arthropod prey. We evaluated prey availability and capture rates by web-weaving spiders and pitcher plants in a headwater stream box complex (Harvard Pond) in central Massachusetts. We established 40 plots with spider and pitcher plant removal treatments, and collected arthropod prey captured by open pitcher plants, pitfall traps, and sticky traps in those plots. The removal of web-building spiders significantly changed the distribution of prey captured by the pitcher plants (Chi-square test: P = 2.2 × 10-16 at Harvard Pond). Plugging pitcher plants yielded no difference in prey capture by sticky traps or pitfall traps. In pitcher plants, the total number of Odonata, Diptera, and Hemiptera captured more than doubled when web-weaving spiders were removed from the plots. In pitfall traps in web-weaving spider removal plots, the total number of ants decreased by more than 50%. Hunting spider capture by sticky traps showed moderate increase (P = 0.08) when web-weaving spiders were removed, suggesting an unforeseen interaction between these groups of spiders. The increased predation risk of hunting spiders on ants may explain the marked decrease in ant activity when web-weaving spiders were removed.

Highlights

  • In New England bogs, web-weaving spiders and northern pitcher plants are co-occurring sit-and-wait predators with shared arthropod prey

  • Web-weaving spider removal did not reduce the total number of spiders caught in sticky traps, pitfall traps, or pitcher plants; this is because the five times as many hunting spiders as web-weavers were captured by these three methods

  • We observed a trend of increase in hunting spiders when web-weaving spiders were removed (p=0.08)

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Summary

Introduction

In New England bogs, web-weaving spiders and northern pitcher plants are co-occurring sit-and-wait predators with shared arthropod prey. At the peak of the arthropod food web in our study site is a guild of four web-weaving spiders (shown at left) and two diverse families of hunting spider (show below). These spiders have been shown to interact with the northern pitcher plant as kleptoparasites, as prey items, and as potential competitors. We hypothesized that the removal of web-weaving spiders would result in increased prey capture by pitcher plants. Nature Precedings : doi:10.1038/npre.2009.3662.1 : Posted 20 Aug 2009

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