Nectar meals of a mosquito-specialist spider

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Abstract

Evarcha culicivora, an East African jumping spider, is known for feeding indirectly on vertebrate blood by actively choosing blood-carrying mosquitoes as prey. Using cold-anthrone tests to detect fructose, we demonstrate that E. culicivora also feeds on nectar. Field-collected individuals, found on the plant Lantana camara, tested positive for plant sugar (fructose). In the laboratory, E. culicivora tested positive for fructose after being kept with L. camara or one of another ten plant species (Aloe vera, Clerodendron magnifica, Hamelia patens, Lantana montevideo, Leonotis nepetaefolia, Parthenium hysterophorus, Ricinus communis, Senna didymobotrya, Striga asiatica, and Verbena trivernia). Our findings demonstrate that E. culicivora acquires fructose from its natural diet and can ingest fructose directly from plant nectaries. However, experiments in the laboratory also show that E. culicivora can obtain fructose indirectly by feeding on prey that have fed on fructose, implying a need to consider this possibility when field-collected spiders test positive for fructose. In laboratory tests, 53.5% of 1,215 small juveniles, but only 3.4% of 622 adult E. culicivora, left with plants for 24 hours, were positive for fructose. These findings, along with the field data, suggest that fructose is especially important for early-instar juveniles of E. culicivora. © 2012 Josiah O. Kuja et al.

Figures

  • Figure 1: Evarcha culicivora juvenile approaching nectar on an extrafloral nectary of Ricinus communis.
  • Table 1: Cold-anthrone results from testing field-collected Evarcha culicivora individuals of different sizes. All spiders collected from the plant Lantana camara.
  • Table 2: Intersexual comparisons of the numbers of Evarcha culicivora adults positive for fructose (cold-anthrone testing) after having been left with plants for 24 hours. There were no positive results for 8 of the 11 tested plant species, so these results are omitted.
  • Table 3: Number of Evarcha culicivora (juveniles and pooled data for adult females and males) that were positive for fructose (cold-anthrone testing) after being left with plants for 24 hours. Ranked from highest to lowest percentage positive for juveniles.
  • Table 4: Number of Evarcha culicivora juveniles that were observed feeding and number that were positive for fructose (cold-anthrone testing) after being left with plants for 1 hour. Spiders not seen feeding were never positive for fructose.

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Kuja, J. O., Jackson, R. R., Sune, G. O., Karanja, R. N. H., Lagat, Z. O., & Carvell, G. E. (2012). Nectar meals of a mosquito-specialist spider. Psyche (London). https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/898721

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