Source: PLOS
Spiders
start out social but later turn aggressive after dispersing and becoming
solitary, according to a study publishing July 2 in the open-access
journal PLOS Biology by Raphael Jeanson of the National Centre for
Scientific Research (CNRS) in France, and colleagues.
Many
species display sociality only transiently during their life cycle. For
example, spiderlings at their earliest developmental stage show mutual
attraction and social tolerance before they disperse. This strongly contrasts
with post-dispersal, solitary adult spiders that behave aggressively toward --
and sometimes even cannibalize -- other spiders. The onset of dispersal
coincides with a sharp decline in social tolerance in many animals, but the
causal relationship still remains poorly understood.
To
address this question, Jeanson and his colleagues used a combination of
behavioral, chemical and modeling approaches in spiderlings of a solitary
species (Agelena labyrinthica, the labyrinth spider) to investigate the
mechanisms controlling the developmental switch leading to the decline of
social cohesion and the loss of tolerance.
They
found that the process of maturation naturally causes an increase in mobility,
which is itself sufficient to trigger dispersal without requiring any change in
social behaviors. After spending an initial period of about five days in close
proximity, spiderlings progressively dispersed without any change in the social
context, that is, no aggressive interactions were observed before dispersal. By
contrast, the social isolation that inevitably followed dispersal triggered
aggressiveness by altering the way that individual spiders perceived others
from the same species. For example, spiderlings that experienced social
isolation were much more aggressive toward siblings than those reared socially.
According to the authors, the findings provide strong evidence that aggression
is a consequence, not a cause, of dispersal in spiderlings.
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