TY - JOUR
T1 - A perilous Malagasy triad
T2 - a spider (Vigdisia praesidens, gen. and sp. nov.) and an ant compete for termite food
AU - Gregorič, Matjaž
AU - Yu, Kuang Ping
AU - Ravelojaona, Jeremia
AU - Agnarsson, Ingi
AU - Kuntner, Matjaž
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Royal Society of New Zealand.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Ants and termites are insect groups that make up most of the insect biomass in tropical ecosystems. Due to their social structure and abundance, they are some of the most bountiful prey available to other invertebrates such as spiders. However, ants and termites possess dangerous defense strategies, thus limiting their accessibility to general predators. Here, we report on an unexpected finding of a three-way predator-prey-kleptoparasite interaction in Madagascar among a termite Nasutitermes sp. (prey), a previously unknown theridiid spider Vigdisia praesidens gen. nov., sp. nov. (predator), and an ant Pheidole spinosa (kleptoparasite). Our field observations suggest that the spiders are able to detect a damaged termite nest from a distance to disperse onto it and prey on its residents. Kleptoparasitic ants also arrive on the scene to steal from the spiders their termite prey. Both the spider and the ant seem to possess some degree of behavioural prey specialisation for Nasutitermes termites. The here described ecological interaction warrants further study to better understand the exploitation of signals by such phylogenetically diverse arthropods.
AB - Ants and termites are insect groups that make up most of the insect biomass in tropical ecosystems. Due to their social structure and abundance, they are some of the most bountiful prey available to other invertebrates such as spiders. However, ants and termites possess dangerous defense strategies, thus limiting their accessibility to general predators. Here, we report on an unexpected finding of a three-way predator-prey-kleptoparasite interaction in Madagascar among a termite Nasutitermes sp. (prey), a previously unknown theridiid spider Vigdisia praesidens gen. nov., sp. nov. (predator), and an ant Pheidole spinosa (kleptoparasite). Our field observations suggest that the spiders are able to detect a damaged termite nest from a distance to disperse onto it and prey on its residents. Kleptoparasitic ants also arrive on the scene to steal from the spiders their termite prey. Both the spider and the ant seem to possess some degree of behavioural prey specialisation for Nasutitermes termites. The here described ecological interaction warrants further study to better understand the exploitation of signals by such phylogenetically diverse arthropods.
KW - alarm signals
KW - Heterospecific competition
KW - kleptoparasitism
KW - opportunistic predation
KW - prey specialisation
KW - spider web
KW - stenophagy
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85198732110&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03014223.2024.2373185
DO - 10.1080/03014223.2024.2373185
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85198732110
SN - 0301-4223
JO - New Zealand Journal of Zoology
JF - New Zealand Journal of Zoology
ER -