The kinematics of amblypygid (Arachnida) pedipalps during predation: extreme elongation in raptorial appendages does not result in a proportionate increase in reach and closing speed

Author:

McLean Callum J.12ORCID,Brassey Charlotte A.2ORCID,Seiter Michael34ORCID,Garwood Russell J.56ORCID,Gardiner James D.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Aberdeen 1 The School of Biological Sciences , , Aberdeen AB24 2TZ, Scotland , UK

2. Manchester Metropolitan University 2 Faculty of Science and Engineering , , Manchester M15 6BH , UK

3. University of Vienna 3 Department of Evolutionary Biology, Unit Integrative Zoology , , 1010 Vienna , Austria

4. Naturhistorisches Museum Wien 4 , 1010 Vienna , Austria

5. University of Manchester 5 Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences , , Manchester M13 9PY , UK

6. The Natural History Museum 6 , London SW7 5BD , UK

Abstract

ABSTRACT The link between form and function is key to understanding the evolution of unique and/or extreme morphologies. Amblypygids, or whip spiders, are arachnids that often have highly elongated spined pedipalps. These limbs are used to strike at, and secure, prey before processing by the chelicerae. Amblypygi pedipalps are multifunctional, however, being used in courtship and contest, and vary greatly in form between species. Increased pedipalp length may improve performance during prey capture, but length could also be influenced by factors including territorial contest and sexual selection. Here, for the first time, we used high-speed videography and manual tracking to investigate kinematic differences in prey capture between amblypygid species. Across six morphologically diverse species, spanning four genera and two families, we created a total dataset of 86 trials (9–20 per species). Prey capture kinematics varied considerably between species, with differences being expressed in pedipalp joint angle ranges. In particular, maximum reach ratio did not remain constant with total pedipalp length, as geometric scaling would predict, but decreased with longer pedipalps. This suggests that taxa with the most elongated pedipalps do not deploy their potential length advantage to proportionally increase reach. Therefore, a simple mechanical explanation of increased reach does not sufficiently explain pedipalp elongation. We propose other factors to help explain this phenomenon, such as social interactions or sexual selection, which would produce an evolutionary trade-off in pedipalp length between prey capture performance and other behavioural and/or anatomical pressures.

Funder

Manchester Metropolitan University

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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