Abstract
Preferred ambush sites of fishing spiders Dolomedes triton (Pisauridae) were investigated, primarily with respect to aquatic vegetation and wave action, at five locations differing in these variables along the shore of Dow Lake (near Athens, Ohio). The linear density of spiders correlated positively with the presence of aquatic vegetation. D. triton most often stood at a distance from shore proportional to the width of the zone of floating and emergent vegetation (Fig. 2). Usually they positioned their bodies in the horizontal plane on floating living or dead plant parts. Spider density was negatively correlated with the amplitude of wind-generated waves (Fig. 4). The maximum energy of these waves measured on breezy days was at a frequency of 1.4 Hz, with no components exceeding 10 Hz (Fig. 5). Spiders could discriminate high-amplitude (up to 40 mm) wind waves from prey waves, probably since the latter have substantially higher frequencies (Figs. 3, 5).
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