Abstract
Colonial orb-weaving spiders from Mexico (Metepeira spp.), show considerable geographic variation and temporal flexibility in group size and social spacing. A series of laboratory studies was conducted to test whether the variation observed in the field is the result of behavioral plasticity, or the result of genetic mechanisms inherent in different populations. Spiders from source populations in desert and moist tropical habitats were collected as eggs and raised in the laboratory under identical controlled conditions. To test for the effect of experience on conspecific tolerance, experiments were conducted rearing tropical and desert spiderlings in isolation and in communal groups. Measurements of spacing in laboratory colonies and observations of web building behavior show significant differences between populations, suggesting genetic differences between them. Desert spiders show an initial effect of isolation on tolerance of conspecifics — greater inter-individual distance that is eventually modified by communal adult experience. Tropical spiders put together after isolation show spacing patterns opposite those observed for desert spiders, and nearest neighbor distances similar to those seen in the communally reared (tropical) groups. These findings support the hypothesis that these populations represent separate species that differ with respect to their level of sociality.
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