Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Earth Science News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
Velvet spiders emerge from underground in new cybertaxonomic monograph
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (SPX) Jun 01, 2012


This is the velvet spider Loureedia. Credit: Photograph by Martin Forman.

Velvet spiders include some of the most beautiful arachnids in Europe and some of the world's most cooperative species. Social species can be very abundant in parts of tropical Africa and Asia with conspicuous colonies dotting the landscape. Social colonies may consist of hundreds of closely-related individuals that participate in dramatic mass attacks on prey (Figure 1) and care for their young.

The ecology of these social species is fascinating and has been the subject of several landmark scientific papers. The study was published in a special issue of the open access journal ZooKeys.

By contrast, most kinds of velvet spider are rarely encountered. Most species keep well hidden or dig burrows and live underground. Because of the cryptic habits of most velvet spiders, scientific knowledge of this spider family is uneven to say the least. The name velvet spider accurately describes the dark and shiny appearance of these spiders.

Some species also have brightly colored highlights, such as the red, white, and black ladybird spiders of Europe and North Asia (Figure 2). With the exception of one species from Brazil, velvet spiders live in Europe, Asia, and Africa.

The international team assembled to advance basic knowledge about velvet spiders included people and institutions from the Netherlands, Denmark, United States, Czechia, Hungary, and Iran.

International collaboration in taxonomic research was the goal of the EDIT (European Distributed Institute of Taxonomy) Integrated Research grant, which provided most of the funding for this project. The team assembled a hefty library of images documenting the anatomy of all the major kinds of velvet spider.

This included both portrait-like color photographs and electron micrographs showing details of the spigots that these spiders use to make silk. San Francisco-based artist Giovanni Maki contributed beautiful drawings of the male genitalia.

The project also used DNA sequence data to reconstruct the evolutionary history of velvet spiders. The DNA data confirmed that one particularly enigmatic species belongs to a new genus (Figure 3).

In recognition of the fact that this velvet spider lives underground, the new genus has been named Loureedia in a whimsical salute to the musician who began his distinguished career leading the 60s rock band "The Velvet Underground."

In spite of all the progress that this new monograph represents, there is much more work still to be done. Taxonomy is a fundamental science, and advances in it can promote research in other areas.

Some of the most obscure groups of velvet spiders from the Mediterranean and Southern Africa will now be more easy to identify and study. This is thanks to the progressive approach taken by publisher Pensoft. The full-color monograph is freely available for download through the web site of the journal ZooKeys.

Pictures and descriptions also appear on the wiki web site Species-ID and an interactive map of the specimens used in the study is explorable using Google Earth (please note you must have it installed in order to view the map). So this publically-funded research on a remarkable and often beautiful group of spiders will be freely available not only to scientists but to the public as well.

Miller JA, Griswold CE, Scharff N, Rezac M, Szuts T, Marhabaie M (2012) The velvet spiders: an atlas of the Eresidae (Arachnida, Araneae). ZooKeys 195: 1-144. doi: 10.3897/zookeys.195.2342

.


Related Links
European Distributed Institute of Taxonomy) Integrated
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
Relationship Between Social Status and Wound-Healing in Wild Baboons
Washington DC (SPX) May 31, 2012
Turns out it's not bad being top dog, or in this case, top baboon. Results of a study by University of Notre Dame biologist Beth Archie and colleagues from Princeton University and Duke University finds that male baboons that have a high rank within their society recover more quickly from injuries, and are less likely to become ill than other males. The finding is somewhat surprising, give ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Ferrari auction to raise money for Italy quake

Sandia Labs technology used in Fukushima cleanup

Peru carries out nationwide earthquake safety drill

Quake survivors' misery as Italy counts the cost

FLORA AND FAUNA
Netflix tops Apple in booming US online movies

The finest gold dust in the world

Microreactors to produce explosive materials

Short movies stored in an atomic vapor

FLORA AND FAUNA
US backs EU plan to barter fishing rights

Warm, dry El Nino weather puts baby sea turtle at risk

DNA evidence shows that marine reserves help to sustain fisheries

BGU Researchers Test Solar Desalination System for Arid Land Agriculture

FLORA AND FAUNA
Discovery Of Historical Photos Sheds Light On Greenland Ice Loss

New theory addresses frozen Earth paradox

New Study by WHOI Scientists Provides Baseline Measurements of Carbon in Arctic Ocean

Illuminating the Ancient History of Circumarctic Peoples

FLORA AND FAUNA
Livestock industry beefs up Illinois economy

Time is ticking for some crop's wild relatives

Tomato genome becomes fully sequenced

Australia and China eye joint farming plan

FLORA AND FAUNA
US officials urge hurricane preparation

Autopsy of an eruption: Linking crystal growth to volcano seismicity

Aftershocks in Italy's quake-struck northeast

Forest Recovering from Mt. St. Helens Explosion

FLORA AND FAUNA
Sierra Leone's gruesome civil war

Mali deserters in Niger face uncertain future

Gambia detains G.Bissau ex-army chief, ousted minister

DR Congo senior officer defects to join eastern mutiny

FLORA AND FAUNA
Family values

Suspicion resides in two regions of the brain

Personality genes may help account for longevity

Chimpanzees have human-like personalities




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement