Stabilized Morphological Evolution of Spiders Despite Mosaic Changes in Foraging Ecology

Author:

Wolff Jonas O12,Wierucka Kaja13,Paterno Gustavo B4,Coddington Jonathan A5,Hormiga Gustavo6,Kelly Michael B J1,Herberstein Marie E1,Ramírez Martín J7

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Sciences, Macquarie University , Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia

2. Zoological Institute and Museum, University of Greifswald , Loitzer Str. 26, Greifswald 17489, Germany

3. Department of Anthropology, University of Zürich , Winterthurerstrasse 190, Zürich 8057, Switzerland

4. Biodiversity, Macroecology and Biogeography, Faculty of Forest Sciences and Forest Ecology , University of Göttingen, Büsgenweg 1, Göttingen 37077, Germany

5. Department of Entomology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution , Washington, DC, USA

6. Department of Biological Sciences, The George Washington University , Washington, D.C., USA

7. Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia” , Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Av. Ángel Gallardo 470, C1405DJR, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Abstract

Abstract A prominent question in animal research is how the evolution of morphology and ecology interacts in the generation of phenotypic diversity. Spiders are some of the most abundant arthropod predators in terrestrial ecosystems and exhibit a diversity of foraging styles. It remains unclear how spider body size and proportions relate to foraging style, and if the use of webs as prey capture devices correlates with changes in body characteristics. Here, we present the most extensive data set to date of morphometric and ecological traits in spiders. We used this data set to estimate the change in spider body sizes and shapes over deep time and to test if and how spider phenotypes are correlated with their behavioral ecology. We found that phylogenetic variation of most traits best fitted an Ornstein–Uhlenbeck model, which is a model of stabilizing selection. A prominent exception was body length, whose evolutionary dynamics were best explained with a Brownian Motion (free trait diffusion) model. This was most expressed in the araneoid clade (ecribellate orb-weaving spiders and allies) that showed bimodal trends toward either miniaturization or gigantism. Only few traits differed significantly between ecological guilds, most prominently leg length and thickness, and although a multivariate framework found general differences in traits among ecological guilds, it was not possible to unequivocally associate a set of morphometric traits with the relative ecological mode. Long, thin legs have often evolved with aerial webs and a hanging (suspended) locomotion style, but this trend is not general. Eye size and fang length did not differ between ecological guilds, rejecting the hypothesis that webs reduce the need for visual cue recognition and prey immobilization. For the inference of the ecology of species with unknown behaviors, we propose not to use morphometric traits, but rather consult (micro-)morphological characters, such as the presence of certain podal structures. These results suggest that, in contrast to insects, the evolution of body proportions in spiders is unusually stabilized and ecological adaptations are dominantly realized by behavioral traits and extended phenotypes in this group of predators. This work demonstrates the power of combining recent advances in phylogenomics with trait-based approaches to better understand global functional diversity patterns through space and time. [Animal architecture; Arachnida; Araneae; extended phenotype; functional traits; macroevolution; stabilizing selection.]

Funder

Macquarie University Research Fellowship of Macquarie University, a Discovery Early Career Researcher Award of the Australian Research Council

Principle Investigator Grant of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

German Research Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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