MEXICO: Spiders can travel large distances across water like ships, using their legs as sails and their silk as an anchor, a new study has found.
The study also explains how spiders are able to migrate across vast distances and why they are quick to colonise new areas.
Common spiders are frequently observed to fly using a technique called ‘ballooning’. This involves using their silk to catch the wind which then lifts them up into the air.
Ballooning spiders are estimated to move up to 30 km per day when wind conditions are suitable, helping in their quest for new habitats and resources.
However, an airborne spider has little control over where it travels and could end up landing on water, which has been thought to be unsuitable for its survival.
“Even Darwin took note of flying spiders that kept dropping on the Beagle miles away from the sea shore. But given that spiders are terrestrial, and that they do not have control over where they will travel when ballooning, how could evolution allow such risky behaviour to be maintained?” said lead author Morito Hayashi from the Natural History Museum, London.
“We’ve now found that spiders actively adopt postures that allow them to use the wind direction to control their journey on water.
“They even drop silk and stop on the water surface when they want. This ability compensates for the risks of landing on water after the uncontrolled spider flights,” Hayashi said.
The researchers collected 325 adult spiders belonging to 21 common species from small islands in nature reserves in UK.
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