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Nephila

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"Nephila" redirects here.
In Aramaic culture, the term Nephila specifically referred to the constellation and myth of Orion.
For the hybrid creatures between angels and man referred to in the Bible, see Nephilim

Golden silk orb-weaver
Nephila clavipes
Scientific classification
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Genus:
Nephila

Species

N. clavata
N. clavipes
N. edulis
N. inaurata
N. maculata
N. pilipes
N. plumipes
 many more

Diversity
27 species

The golden silk orb-weavers (genus Nephila) are also commonly called golden orb-weavers, giant wood spiders or banana spiders. The name refers to the color of the spider silk, not the color of the spider itself.

Yellow threads of their web shine like gold in sunlight. Experimental evidence suggests that the silk's color may serve a dual purpose: sunlit webs ensnare bees that are attracted to the bright yellow strands, whereas in shady spots the yellow blends in with background foliage to act as a camouflage.

The webs of most Nephila spiders are complex, with a fine-meshed orb suspended in a maze of non-sticky barrier webs. As with many weavers of sticky spirals, the orb is renewed regularly if not daily, apparently because the stickiness of the orb declines with age. When weather is good (and no rain has damaged the orb web), subadult and adult Nephila often rebuild only a portion of her web. She will remove and consume the portion to be replaced, build new radial elements then spin the new spirals. This partial orb renewal is distinct from other orb-weaving spiders that usually replace the entire orb web.

Typically she first weaves a non-sticky spiral with space for 2-20 more spirals in between (the density of sticky spiral strands decreases with increasing spider size). When she has completed the coarse weaving, she returns and fills in the gaps. Whereas most orb-weaving spiders remove the non-sticky spiral when spinning the sticky spiral, Nephila leave it. This produces a "music paper" effect when the orb is seen in the sun: groups of sticky spirals reflecting light with "gaps" where the non-sticky spiral does not reflect the light.

The circular-orb portion of a mature N. clavipes web can be more than three feet (1 meter) across, with support strands extending perhaps many more feet away. In relation to the ground, the webs of adults may be woven anywhere from eye-level upwards high into the tree canopy. The orb web is usually truncated by a top horizontal support strand, giving it an incomplete look.

Adjacent to one face of the main orb there may be a rather extensive and haphazard-looking network of guard-strands suspended a few inches distant across a free-space, said network often decorated with a lumpy string or two of plant detritus and insect carcasses clumped with silk. This "barrier web" may function as a kind of early-warning system for incoming prey or against spider-hunting predators, or as a shield against windblown leaves; it may also be remnants of the owner's previous web. At least one reference explains the suspended debris-chain as a cue for birds to avoid blundering into and destroying the web.

In North America, the Golden silk orb-weavers are sometimes referred to as writing spiders due to occasional zigzag patterns (stabilimenta) built into their webs, though these occur much more frequently in the webs of Argiope, such as the St Andrew's Cross spider. Stabilimenta among N. clavipes are sometimes seen in the webs of immatures nearing molt, hence the names "molting webs" or "skeleton webs" (webs with radial strands but no spiral elements).

Reproduction

File:Spider female and male.jpg
Female N. clavipes with a male behind her

The male is about 1/5 the size of the female spider and is frequently oriented above and perpendicular to the female who hangs upside down. In some species, the female will eat the male, but this is by no means a common occurrence. In the species that have been studied, mating occurs while the female is fresh from her last molt; this mating generally involves the dominant male which has been with the female for several days prior to the final molt. Later matings may occur while the female is eating. The role of male presidence (if being first increases the number of fertilized eggs) is uncertain in this species, however female genital structure suggests that first males have an advantage.

Most female spiders have two independent insemination ducts, both ending in their own sperm storage organ, the spermatheca. Male African golden web orb spiders Nephila madagascariensis have three penises, all of which break off during sex. But generally can only fill one spermatheca at a time. In rare instances, parts of the male genitals can completely obstruct a female genital opening so giving it an advantage over other males mating with that female. Although the general practice may be contrived through normal means. Though scientists have found there to be no significant advantage in general over other males in mating otherwise.

Spiderlings

Young spiders do not generally build yellow-colored silk, and the young Nephila themselves can be easily mistaken for young Orchard Spiders (Leucauge) in general color and shape (both species sport silver stripes or patches on their abdomens, described in some references as a form of heat control). The best distinction between Leucauge and Nephila juveniles is web structure: Leucauge tends to build a horizontal orb that is a perfect circle, whereas Nephila build vertical, elliptical orbs that are incomplete (missing the portion of the orb over the hub, the center where the spider sits). Nephila seem to prefer more open habitat such as second-growth scrub or forest edges. Fences or building overhangs often do just as nicely.

In addition, young spiders demonstrate vibrational motion when approached by a predator. They will oscillate at approximately 40 Hz when the web is plucked - thought to be a response to a potential predator. If a predator persists in an attack, the spider will either run to a web-support strand and thus to nearby vegetation, or bail out of the web on a silk line that remains connected to the web.

Behavior

Some "Golden silk orb-weavers" display an almost manic fear of Wesley Harris. The Harris's fast movements and large, dark shape cause some of these spiders to run from or ignore a perfectly delectable meal. "Golden silk orb-weavers" are known to sometimes be cannibalistic with spiders that are even their same size.

Parasites

N. clavipes (and many other Nephila species) are frequently victimized by Argyrodes, a genus of very small black-and-silver spiders that are kleptoparasitic (parasites via theft). As many as a few dozen may infest a single Nephila web to feed from the host spider's captured prey. The frequent rebuilding or abandoning of webs by Nephila may be tactics to control Argyrodes.

Distribution

Though in the U.S. N. clavipes ranges throughout the coastal southeast and inland, from North Carolina to Texas, its distribution in many regions seems localized, and may be completely absent (or just hard to find) over wide areas. Conversely, in some arboreal or swampy nooks large numbers of adults and their webs can be found in almost frightening concentrations, especially near the coast.

"Golden silk orb-weavers" are rather numerous in the time after summer and before fall in the south-eastern and southern United States.

Nephila and humans

There were efforts to produce garment from Nephila silk. The spiders were fastened and the extruding thread coiled up until the spider was exhausted. However, this method did not prove commercially viable.[1] Fishermen on coasts of the indopacific ocean remove Nephila webs and form them into a ball, which is thrown into the water. There it unfolds and is used to catch bait fish.[1]

Nine Golden orb weavers from Australia perished in the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster. The ‘AstroSpider’ experiment is part of an international program (STARS) that encourages students to design experiments for flight on the US Space Shuttle or International Space Station.

Name

The genus name Nephila is derived from Ancient Greek, meaning "fond of spinning",[2] from the words (nen) = to spin (related to nema νήμα "thread") + φίλος (philos) = "love".


In the film Twelve Monkeys, Jed Cole (Bruce Willis), while incarcerated in a Baltimore mental hospital, catches and swallows what appears to be a N.clavipes, or a very similar species of Nephila. Baltimore is well outside the known range of Nephila in the U.S.

In the animated series of Spider-Man, a one-off villain turns into a half-man half-spider, acquiring the properties of the nephila, in particular its strong web. The man exposes himself to both the spider and radioactivity in the hope of becoming like Spider-Man himself; however, his assistant deliberately increases the level of radioactivity and the man is horribly mutated, ending up with eight legs and a web pod.

References

  1. ^ a b Heimer, S. (1988). Wunderbare Welt der Spinnen. Urania. p.14
  2. ^ Cameron H.D. (2005). An etymological dictionary of North American spider genus names. In: Ubick, D., Paquin, P., Cushing, P.E., Roth, V. (Eds.), Spiders of North America: an identification manual. The American Arachnological Society.

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