Modular patterns in behavioural evolution: webs derived from orbs

Author:

Eberhard William G.12

Affiliation:

1. aSmithsonian Tropical Research Institute; Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San José, Costa Rica

2. bMuseum of Natural Science, Louisiana State University, Murphy J. Foster Hall, 119 Dalrymple Drive, Baton Rouge, LA 70802, USA

Abstract

Abstract Imperfect knowledge of ancestral behaviour often hampers tracing behavioural evolution. This limitation is reduced in orb weaving spiders, because spider orb web construction behaviour and the cues used by modern orb-weavers are well-studied and highly conserved. Several species in orb-weaving families build non-orb webs that are clearly derived from orbs, allowing transitions from ancestral to modern behaviours to be described with high confidence. Three major patterns of general evolutionary significance were found in 69 phylogenetically independent transitions in 15 groups in 8 families: ancestral traits were often maintained as units; the most frequent of the eight different types of ancestral trait change was transfer of an ancestral behaviour to a new context; and ‘new’ traits that had no clear homology with ancestral traits were also common. Changes occurred in all major stages of orb construction. This may be the most extensive summary of evolutionary transitions in behaviour yet compiled.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Animal Science and Zoology

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