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Dolomedes /dɒləˈmiːdiːz/ is a genus of large spiders of the family Pisauridae. They are also known as fishing spiders, raft spiders, dock spiders or wharf spiders. Almost all Dolomedes species are semiaquatic, with the exception of the tree-dwelling D. albineus of the southeastern United States. Many species have a striking pale stripe down each side of the body.
Dolomedes | |
---|---|
Raft spider (D. fimbriatus) female with juvenile spiders | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Pisauridae |
Genus: | Dolomedes Latreille, 1804[1] |
Species | |
Diversity[1] | |
c. 101 species | |
Synonyms | |
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They hunt by waiting at the edge of a pool or stream, then when they detect the ripples from prey, they run across the surface to subdue it using their foremost legs, which are tipped with small claws; like other spiders they then inject venom with their hollow jaws to kill and digest the prey. They mainly eat insects, but some larger species are able to catch small fish. They can also climb beneath the water, when they become encased in a silvery film of air. "Dolomedes" is derived from the Greek word "δολομήδης" which means wily, deceitful.[2]
There are over a hundred species of Dolomedes throughout the world; examples include Dolomedes aquaticus, a forest-stream species of New Zealand, the raft spider (D. fimbriatus), which lives in bogs in Europe, and the great raft spider (D. plantarius), which lives in fens, also in Europe. Many species are large, some with females up to 26 mm (1.0 in) long with a leg span of 80 mm (3.1 in).[3]
Aquatic adaptations
editDolomedes spiders are covered all over in short, velvety hairs which are hydrophobic. This allows them to use surface tension to stand or run on the water, like water striders. They can also climb beneath the water, and then air becomes trapped in the body hairs and forms a thin film over the whole surface of the body and legs, giving them the appearance of fine polished silver. Like other spiders, Dolomedes breathe with book lungs beneath their abdomens, and these open into the air film, allowing the spiders to breathe while submerged. The trapped air makes them very buoyant and if they do not hold onto a rock or a plant stem they float to the surface where they pop onto the surface film, completely dry.
Identification
editIf any of this species are seen without context, one may confuse them with the family Lycosidae, otherwise known as Wolf Spiders. Though one could easily identify them, as this genus has two rows of eyes, with two larger eyes at the top, which is unique to this genus inside the Pisauridae family.[4] If this is insufficient, one can further differentiate them thanks to their aquatic adaptations.
Hunting behavior
editRather than hunting on land or by waiting in a web, these spiders hunt on the surface of the water itself, preying on mayflies, other aquatic insects, and even small fish.[5][6] For fishing spiders, the water surface serves the same function as a web does for other spiders. They extend their legs onto the surface, feeling for vibrations given off by prey.
Dolomedes are nocturnal hunters, feeding when birds, their main predators, are sleeping. The method they use to fish for insects is to hold on to the shore with their back legs while the rest of their body lies on the water, with legs stretched out. Dolomedes species tend to be robust with thickset legs that allow them to tackle prey larger than themselves. They stretch out their front legs and wait, as if listening. Their front legs feel the vibrations carried on the water, just as other spiders feel the vibrations in a web. They are able to tell what is causing the vibrations that the water is carrying – to distinguish the drawn-out, erratic vibrations of a struggling insect from the one-off vibrations caused by falling leaves or the background noise of the wind or the flow of the water around rocks and other obstacles. As well as identifying the source of the vibrations, the spiders are also able to discern the distance to and direction of the source. To this end they have a range of vibration-detecting organs, including very sensitive hairs (trichobothria) on their legs and feet. Their eyes play a secondary role; experiments on related species show that touch is the main sense these spiders use to catch their prey. Their eyes are of little use for nocturnal hunting. These vibration detectors also serve to warn the spider of predators such as trout.
As soon as the vibrations reveal that there is a floundering insect within range, some fishing spiders may take direct action – they run at pace across the surface of the water and grab the insect before it extracts itself from the water and flies to safety. Some fishing spiders use silk draglines to prevent themselves from speeding past the prey.
Fishing spiders' main prey is aquatic insects, but they are opportunistic feeders and will eat anything suitable that happens within range. Dolomedes in North America have been observed catching and eating small goldfish.[7]
Predators
editThe main predators of fishing spiders are birds and snakes. Dragonflies have also been observed catching young spiders. Species parasitic on the spiders include a wasp of the Pompilidae family, commonly called the Spider Wasp,[8] that stings the spider to paralyze it before carrying it off and laying an egg in its abdomen. The larvae of the wasp hatch and proceed to eat the spider from the inside out. One escape technique the spiders use is to disappear beneath the surface tension of the water. However, some wasps, such as Anoplius depressipes, are able to be underwater for a few minutes to sting the spider and drag it out of the water.[9]
Breeding
editThe males outnumber the females 3:1 suggesting a male-biased sex ratio. Mating in one North American species (D. tenebrosus) always results in the obligate death of the male, with no obvious involvement from the female.[10]
Species
editAs of November 2021[update], the World Spider Catalog accepted the following 101 species:[1]
- Dolomedes actaeon Pocock, 1903 – Cameroon
- Dolomedes albicomus L. Koch, 1867 – Australia (Queensland, New South Wales)
- Dolomedes albicoxus Bertkau, 1880 – Brazil
- Dolomedes albineus Hentz, 1845 – USA
- Dolomedes alexandri Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Capital Territory, Victoria)
- Dolomedes angolensis (Roewer, 1955) – Angola
- Dolomedes angustivirgatus Kishida, 1936 – China, Korea, Japan
- Dolomedes angustus (Thorell, 1899) – Cameroon
- Dolomedes annulatus Simon, 1877 – Philippines
- Dolomedes aquaticus Goyen, 1888 – New Zealand
- Dolomedes batesi Pocock, 1903 – Cameroon
- Dolomedes bistylus Roewer, 1955 – Congo
- Dolomedes boiei (Doleschall, 1859) – Sri Lanka, Indonesia (Java)
- Dolomedes briangreenei Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (New South Wales, Queensland)
- Dolomedes bukhkaloi Marusik, 1988 – Russia
- Dolomedes chevronus Yin, 2012 – China
- Dolomedes chinesus Chamberlin, 1924 – China
- Dolomedes chroesus Strand, 1911 – Indonesia (Aru Is., New Guinea)
- Dolomedes costatus Zhang, Zhu & Song, 2004 – China
- Dolomedes crosbyi Lessert, 1928 – Congo
- Dolomedes dondalei Vink & Dupérré, 2010 – New Zealand
- Dolomedes elegans Taczanowski, 1874 – French Guiana
- Dolomedes facetus L. Koch, 1876 – Australia, New Guinea, Samoa
- Dolomedes fageli Roewer, 1955 – Congo
- Dolomedes femoralis Hasselt, 1882 – Indonesia (Sumatra)
- Dolomedes fernandensis Simon, 1910 – Equatorial Guinea (Bioko)
- Dolomedes fimbriatus (Clerck, 1757) (type species) – Palearctic
- Dolomedes flaminius L. Koch, 1867 – Australia (Queensland), New Caledonia
- Dolomedes fontus Tanikawa & Miyashita, 2008 – Japan
- Dolomedes furcatus Roewer, 1955 – Mozambique
- Dolomedes fuscipes Roewer, 1955 – Cameroon
- Dolomedes fuscus Franganillo, 1931 – Cuba
- Dolomedes gertschi Carico, 1973 – USA
- Dolomedes gracilipes Lessert, 1928 – Congo
- Dolomedes guamuhaya Alayón, 2003 – Cuba
- Dolomedes holti Carico, 1973 – Mexico
- Dolomedes horishanus Kishida, 1936 – Taiwan, Japan
- Dolomedes instabilis L. Koch, 1876 – Australia, Papua New Guinea
- Dolomedes intermedius Giebel, 1863 – Colombia
- Dolomedes japonicus Bösenberg & Strand, 1906 – China, Korea, Japan
- Dolomedes kalanoro Silva & Griswold, 2013 – Madagascar
- Dolomedes karijini Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Western Australia)
- Dolomedes karschi Strand, 1913 – Sri Lanka
- Dolomedes lafoensis Berland, 1924 – New Caledonia
- Dolomedes laticeps Pocock, 1898 – Solomon Is.
- Dolomedes lesserti Roewer, 1955 – Mozambique
- Dolomedes lizturnerae Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Tasmania)
- Dolomedes machadoi Roewer, 1955 – West Africa
- Dolomedes macrops Simon, 1906 – Sudan
- Dolomedes mankorlod Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Northern Territory)
- Dolomedes mendigoetmopasi Barrion, 1995 – Philippines
- Dolomedes minahassae Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi)
- Dolomedes minor L. Koch, 1876 – New Zealand
- Dolomedes mizhoanus Kishida, 1936 – China, Laos, Malaysia, Taiwan
- Dolomedes naja Berland, 1938 – Vanuatu
- Dolomedes neocaledonicus Berland, 1924 – New Caledonia
- Dolomedes nigrimaculatus Song & Chen, 1991 – China, Korea
- Dolomedes noukhaiva Walckenaer, 1847 – Marquesas Is.
- Dolomedes ohsuditia Kishida, 1936 – Japan
- Dolomedes okefinokensis Bishop, 1924 – USA
- Dolomedes orion Tanikawa, 2003 – Japan
- Dolomedes palmatus Zhang, Zhu & Song, 2005 – China
- Dolomedes palpiger Pocock, 1903 – Cameroon
- Dolomedes paroculus Simon, 1901 – Malaysia
- Dolomedes pedder Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Tasmania)
- Dolomedes pegasus Tanikawa, 2012 – Japan
- Dolomedes petalinus Yin, 2012 – China
- Dolomedes plantarius (Clerck, 1757) – Europe, Russia (Europe to South Siberia), Kazakhstan
- Dolomedes pullatus Nicolet, 1849 – Chile
- Dolomedes raptor Bösenberg & Strand, 1906 – Russia, China, Korea, Japan
- Dolomedes raptoroides Zhang, Zhu & Song, 2004 – China
- Dolomedes saganus Bösenberg & Strand, 1906 – China, Taiwan, Japan
- Dolomedes schauinslandi Simon, 1899 – New Zealand
- Dolomedes scriptus Hentz, 1845 – USA, Canada
- Dolomedes senilis Simon, 1880 – Russia, China, Japan
- Dolomedes signatus Walckenaer, 1837 – Mariana Is.
- Dolomedes silvicola Tanikawa & Miyashita, 2008 – China, Japan
- Dolomedes smithi Lessert, 1916 – East Africa
- Dolomedes spathularis Hasselt, 1882 – Indonesia (Sumatra)
- Dolomedes stilatus Karsch, 1878 – Australia
- Dolomedes straeleni Roewer, 1955 – Congo
- Dolomedes striatus Giebel, 1869 – USA, Canada
- Dolomedes sulfureus L. Koch, 1878 – Russia, China, Korea, Japan
- Dolomedes sumatranus Strand, 1906 – Indonesia (Sumatra)
- Dolomedes tadzhikistanicus Andreeva, 1976 – Tajikistan
- Dolomedes tenebrosus Hentz, 1844 – USA, Canada
- Dolomedes titan Berland, 1924 – New Caledonia, Vanuatu
- Dolomedes toldo Alayón, 2003 – Cuba
- Dolomedes transfuga Pocock, 1900 – Congo
- Dolomedes triton (Walckenaer, 1837) – North America, Cuba
- Dolomedes upembensis (Roewer, 1955) – Congo
- Dolomedes vatovae Caporiacco, 1940 – Ethiopia
- Dolomedes venmani Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (New South Wales, Queensland)
- Dolomedes vicque Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland)
- Dolomedes vittatus Walckenaer, 1837 – USA
- Dolomedes wetarius Strand, 1911 – Indonesia
- Dolomedes wollastoni Hogg, 1915 – New Guinea
- Dolomedes wollemi Raven & Hebron, 2018 – Australia (New South Wales)
- Dolomedes yawatai Ono, 2002 – Japan (Ryukyu Is.)
- Dolomedes zatsun Tanikawa, 2003 – Japan
- Dolomedes zhangjiajiensis Yin, 2012 – China
Distribution
editThe approximately 100 species of Dolomedes have a worldwide distribution. The largest number of species are found in Asia, with particularly high species diversity in South-east Asia, from China and Japan to New Guinea. The second largest number of species occur in tropical Africa. South America has only four species.[1][11]
North America
editThis section needs additional citations for verification. (September 2017) |
Nine species of Dolomedes exist in North America.[1] The six-spotted fishing spider (D. triton) lives primarily in small lakes and ponds. This spider consumes mostly water striders (pond skaters), but like all Dolomedes, it is an opportunistic ambush hunter that will eat anything that it can capture. Other species include the bog-dwelling D. striatus, and four species living by streams: D. scriptus, D. vittatus, D. gertschi and D. holti. Two North American species, D. tenebrosus and D. okefinokensis, exhibit female giganticism and/or male dwarfism, with their males being less than half the size of the females. The ninth species is the arboreal D. albineus.
Europe
editTwo Dolomedes species occur in Europe (excluding Russia).[1] The Palearctic raft spider (D. fimbriatus) is widespread on the surface of bog pools and in boggy grassland.[12] The great raft spider (D. plantarius) lives in fens, and is listed as endangered in Great Britain and is globally vulnerable.[13]
New Zealand
editFour endemic species of Dolomedes occur in New Zealand, three on the mainland and one on the Chatham Islands.[14] Two are widespread: D. aquaticus of open riverbanks and lakeshores, and D. dondalei or New Zealand forest fishing spider (once referred to as Dolomedes III), which specialises in forested riverbanks.[7] The largest New Zealand species, D. schauinslandi or the Rangatira spider, occurs on rodent-free islands in the Chathams where running water is rare. The fourth and most common species, D. minor, is found in scrubland, grassland, and wetlands. It mostly hunts on the ground, but is still capable of catching aquatic prey. Known as the nursery web spider, it makes white nursery webs on shrubs.[14]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f "Gen. Dolomedes Latreille, 1804". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
- ^ LSJ: δολομήδης
- ^ Animal Diversity Web: Dolomedes triton
- ^ Katharine Ordway Natural History Study Area. "Dark Fishing Spider". Biotic Inventory Documenting Diversity at the Katharine Ordway Natural History Study Area. Macalester College. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
- ^ T. Barbour (1921). "Spiders feeding on small cyprinodonts". Psyche: A Journal of Entomology. 28 (4): 131–132. doi:10.1155/1921/19421.
- ^ University of Arkansas Museum Arthropod Museum web page: dark fishing spider (Dolomedes tenebrosus). Archived 2009-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Greenwood, Michelle, 2008. "Aquatic Assassins: The Secret Life of Fishing Spiders". New Zealand Geographic, 91. (online summary Archived December 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine).
- ^ Evans, Howard E. (1949). "A Taxonomic Study of the Nearctic Spider Wasps Belonging to the Tribe Pompilini (Hymenoptera: Pompilidae). Part I". Transactions of the American Entomological Society. 75 (3/4): 133–270. ISSN 0002-8320. JSTOR 25077604.
- ^ Guarisco, Hank (2010). "The Fishing Spider genus Dolomedes (Araneae: Pisauridae) in Kansas". Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. 113 (1/2). Kansas Academy of Science: 35–43. doi:10.1660/062.113.0202. JSTOR 40588254. S2CID 83618832. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
- ^ "Spontaneous male death and monogyny in the dark fishing spider", Steven K. Schwartz, William E. Wagner Jr and Eileen A. Hebets. Biol. Lett. 23 August 2013 vol. 9 no. 4 20130113. http://rsbl.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/9/4/20130113.long
- ^ Smith, Helen & Baillie, Stephen (2010–2013). "Taxonomy". Dolomedes.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2017-09-12. Retrieved 2017-09-12.
- ^ "Summary for Dolomedes fimbriatus (Araneae)". srs.britishspiders.org.uk. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
- ^ "Fen Raft Spider Conservation". Biology. Retrieved 2022-12-01.
- ^ a b Vink, Cor J.; Dupérré, N. (2010). "Pisauridae" (PDF). Fauna of New Zealand. 64.
Further reading
edit- Carico, James Edwin (1973): The Nearctic spiders of the genus Dolomedes (Araneae: Pisauridae). Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology (Harvard) 144 (7): 435-488.
External links
edit- Fishing spider Dolomedes tenebrosus
- (free for noncommercial use)
- Pictures of Dolomedes triton Archived 2010-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
- Jeffrey K. Barnes, Dark fishing spider, Arthropod Museum Notes, University of Arkansas.
- Richard Ford, The raft spider (Dolomedes fimbriatus) Archived 2010-04-10 at the Wayback Machine, Digitalwildlife.co.uk. image and short description