Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective

In this paper, 374 incidents of frog predation by spiders are reported based on a comprehensive global literature and social media survey. Frog-catching spiders have been documented from all continents except for Antarctica (>80% of the incidents occurring in the warmer areas between latitude 30°...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:The Journal of Arachnology
Main Authors: Martin Nyffeler, Ronald Altig
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: American Arachnological Society 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
id ftbioone:10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
record_format openpolar
spelling ftbioone:10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26 2023-07-30T03:58:02+02:00 Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective Martin Nyffeler Ronald Altig Martin Nyffeler Ronald Altig world 2020-06-17 text/HTML https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26 en eng American Arachnological Society doi:10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26 All rights reserved. https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26 Text 2020 ftbioone https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26 2023-07-09T10:28:30Z In this paper, 374 incidents of frog predation by spiders are reported based on a comprehensive global literature and social media survey. Frog-catching spiders have been documented from all continents except for Antarctica (>80% of the incidents occurring in the warmer areas between latitude 30° N and 30° S). Frog predation by spiders has been most frequently documented in the Neotropics, with particular concentration in the Central American and Amazon rain forests and the Brazilian Atlantic forest. The captured frogs are predominantly small-sized with an average body length of 2.76 ± 0.13 cm (usually ≈0.2–3.8 g body mass). All stages of the frogs' life cycle (eggs/embryos, hatchlings, tadpoles, emerging metamorphs, immature post-metamorphs, adults) are vulnerable to spider predation. The majority (85%) of the 374 reported incidents of frog predation were attributable to web-less hunting spiders (in particular from the superfamilies Ctenoidea and Lycosoidea) which kill frogs by injection of powerful neurotoxins. The frog-catching spiders are predominantly nocturnal with an average body length of 2.24 ± 0.12 cm (usually ≈0.1–2.7 g body mass). Altogether >200 frog species from 32 families (including several species of bitter tasting dart-poison frogs) have been documented to be hunted by >100 spider species from 22 families. Our finding that such a high diversity of spider taxa is utilizing such a high variety of frog taxa as prey is novel. The utilization of frogs as supplementary food increases the spiders' food supply (i.e., large diet breadth), and this is presumed to enhance their chance of survival. Studies from Australia and South America indicate that frogs might be a substantial component in the diet of some mygalomorph spiders (i.e., families Atracidae, Idiopidae, and Theraphosidae). Many more quantitative investigations on the natural diets of tropical spiders are needed before reliable conclusions on the importance of frogs as spider food can be drawn. Text Antarc* Antarctica BioOne Online Journals The Journal of Arachnology 48 1 26
institution Open Polar
collection BioOne Online Journals
op_collection_id ftbioone
language English
description In this paper, 374 incidents of frog predation by spiders are reported based on a comprehensive global literature and social media survey. Frog-catching spiders have been documented from all continents except for Antarctica (>80% of the incidents occurring in the warmer areas between latitude 30° N and 30° S). Frog predation by spiders has been most frequently documented in the Neotropics, with particular concentration in the Central American and Amazon rain forests and the Brazilian Atlantic forest. The captured frogs are predominantly small-sized with an average body length of 2.76 ± 0.13 cm (usually ≈0.2–3.8 g body mass). All stages of the frogs' life cycle (eggs/embryos, hatchlings, tadpoles, emerging metamorphs, immature post-metamorphs, adults) are vulnerable to spider predation. The majority (85%) of the 374 reported incidents of frog predation were attributable to web-less hunting spiders (in particular from the superfamilies Ctenoidea and Lycosoidea) which kill frogs by injection of powerful neurotoxins. The frog-catching spiders are predominantly nocturnal with an average body length of 2.24 ± 0.12 cm (usually ≈0.1–2.7 g body mass). Altogether >200 frog species from 32 families (including several species of bitter tasting dart-poison frogs) have been documented to be hunted by >100 spider species from 22 families. Our finding that such a high diversity of spider taxa is utilizing such a high variety of frog taxa as prey is novel. The utilization of frogs as supplementary food increases the spiders' food supply (i.e., large diet breadth), and this is presumed to enhance their chance of survival. Studies from Australia and South America indicate that frogs might be a substantial component in the diet of some mygalomorph spiders (i.e., families Atracidae, Idiopidae, and Theraphosidae). Many more quantitative investigations on the natural diets of tropical spiders are needed before reliable conclusions on the importance of frogs as spider food can be drawn.
author2 Martin Nyffeler
Ronald Altig
format Text
author Martin Nyffeler
Ronald Altig
spellingShingle Martin Nyffeler
Ronald Altig
Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
author_facet Martin Nyffeler
Ronald Altig
author_sort Martin Nyffeler
title Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
title_short Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
title_full Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
title_fullStr Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
title_full_unstemmed Spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
title_sort spiders as frog-eaters: a global perspective
publisher American Arachnological Society
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
op_coverage world
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_source https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
op_relation doi:10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
op_rights All rights reserved.
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1636/0161-8202-48.1.26
container_title The Journal of Arachnology
container_volume 48
container_issue 1
container_start_page 26
_version_ 1772820961997881344