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1 November 2013 Aerial dispersal by Actinopus spiderlings (Araneae: Actinopodidae)
Nelson Ferretti, Gabriel Pompozzi, Sofía Copperi, Leonela Schwerdt
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Ballooning, a form of dispersal rarely seen in mygalomorph spiders, was observed in 13 individuals of an undetermined species of Actinopus under laboratory conditions. After ascending a stick, each spiderling initiated ballooning from either the horizontal lines between sticks or from the stick's edges. They became airborne by dropping and dangling from a dragline, which then gradually lifted and lengthened to 10–15 cm in the breeze, broke at its attachment point, and served as a ballooning thread. This method of ballooning has also been observed in araneomorphs and other species of mygalomorphs, and this is probably a more primitive and shorter distance form of ballooning than that typically practiced by higher araneomorphs, which produce airborne silk lines that are pulled from the spider by air currents and are used either as spanning lines or as balloon lines that allow the spider itself to become airborne.

The American Arachnological Society
Nelson Ferretti, Gabriel Pompozzi, Sofía Copperi, and Leonela Schwerdt "Aerial dispersal by Actinopus spiderlings (Araneae: Actinopodidae)," The Journal of Arachnology 41(3), 407-408, (1 November 2013). https://doi.org/10.1636/J13-27.1
Received: 16 April 2013; Published: 1 November 2013
KEYWORDS
Argentina
Ballooning
Mygalomorph
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