Lesley Ciarula Taylor
Star Reporter
Star Reporter
A biologist working in
the Peruvian rainforest has stumbled upon the first evidence of a tiny spider
with a deadly clever game: constructing its own decoy.
“It looked so
spiderlike, with eight legs. The spitting image of a spider,” Phil Torres told the Toronto Star of his discovery.
While Torres, a
specialist in entomology, had never seen a species like it, he’s not ready to
declare a new biological discovery until science can verify his finding.
“It may just be a very
evolved spider that can follow rules.”
Those rules have given
the spider, no bigger than a lentil, a powerful weapon against predators,
Torres said.
Constructing a decoy
many times its size, the spider can lure a substantial meal into its web or
scare off smaller attackers it doesn’t want to tussle with.
The decoy is
painstakingly pieced together from twigs, leaves, uneaten parts of other
insects and rain forest mulch, Torres said.
As he approached the
web, he saw what he thought was a dead spider. Then it started to move. Inching
closer, he spotted “this little guy going like crazy” in one corner, jiggling
the web to animate its decoy and fool its prey.
After finding the
first one, Torres managed to spot 25 in a kilometre-square plain area near the
ecotourism Tambopata
Research Center in southeastern Peru
and none outside that area. Not all were perfect.
“Let’s just say the
spiders had different artistic talents. A few of them had only four legs and
weren’t quite symmetrical. It still does seem to do the trick.”
Other species of
spiders make little balls that look like themselves curled up and dot 10 or so
of them around the web, confusing a hungry wasp that has to figure out which
are fake and which are the real, sleeping spider, Torres said.
This is the first he’s
seen or heard of one that constructs large-scale Potemkin models.
“This behaviour has
never been recorded. It’s not a rare thing for spiders to make designs in their
web or to put debris in their web. This does appear to be the most advanced
design.”
Torres, who has worked
with the research centre for a year and a half, will return to the rainforest
in January from his home base in Los Angeles to collect a sample for
entomologists to examine and determine whether this is a new species with a
highly evolved idea of self-defence.
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