Tag Archives: Latrodectus

Latrodectus Love Bites

Latrodectus valentini (Valentine's widow spider)

St Valentine's widow spider

 

In honour of Valentine’s Day this post will look at the wonderful world of courtship in the spider genus Latrodectus, more commonly known as the widow spiders. Readers of my previous post will recall this genus includes species such as the American black widow (Latrodectus mactans), the Australian redback (L. hasseltii) and the New Zealand katipo (L. katipo), all spiders with a toxic reputation.

Mating: We all know the birds and the bees do it, but what about spiders? Well obviously they have to reproduce but spider courtship presents some problems. Imagine yourself as a male black widow for a moment.  First of all your prospective mate is an aggressive carnivore many times your size.  If that’s not bad enough, you’re venturing into her web where she holds all the advantages. Worst of all, her first reaction is going to be ‘dinner!’ As you can see, mating is a risky business from his point of view!

However, if male spiders were always eaten before they got to mate we’d soon run out of spiders.  In order to approach females in relative safety, male spiders have special courtship signals to let them get up close and personal. Unfortunately, this doesn’t always work and the poor lovelorn male may end up as a snack if he puts a foot wrong. Even if he gets his moves right, he still may not make it out alive. This is how the black widow earned its’ name. It was widely believed that the female black widow would always devour the hapless male after mating. However, it turns out that the black widow’s femme-fatale image is exaggerated because while males may sometimes end up as lunch, it’s not all that common.

So are widow spiders still deserving of the name? Yes!  While the black widow’s reputation might not be completely justified, mating in the Australian redback species can accurately be described as the ultimate dinner date. Not only is the redback male eaten by the female after mating, he voluntarily places himself under her fangs to make it easier.

So what drives this suicidal strategy? Redbacks often live in arid areas where food is short. It’s thought that by feeding his mate she in turn has more nutrients to better provision more eggs and thus develop more of his offspring. But there’s a further twist to this tale. Female redbacks can store sperm from more than one mating for months at a time so one male’s sacrifice may end up being used to provide for another male’s offspring.

Female katipo is a bit gentler on her male counterpart and typically lets him escape to try and mate another day. Katipo and redbacks are close relatives and can still mate, but only one way. This means female katipo can mate with males from either species, but redback females will only mate with their own kind. The male redback will still offer himself up to be bitten when mating with katipo but she’s too polite to nibble!

And before anyone asks, there is no such thing as the St Valentine’s widow spider!

This post is dedicated to the late Dr Lyn Forster, a New Zealand arachnologist who was the first to document sexual cannibalism in the redback spider.

Skin Deep Differences Don’t Matter In Katipo

Skin Deep Differences Don’t Matter in Katipo

Katipo with 3 egg sacs, 1967, by Richard Sharell. Te Papa.

Katipo with 3 egg sacs, 1967, by Richard Sharell. Te Papa.

Having spent my last two postings dealing with butterflies and moths, it’s time to move on to the animals I love the most – spiders!

The subject of this posting is the katipo spider (Latrodectus katipo), New Zealand’s only endemic spider known to be dangerous to humans. Katipo is a Maori word meaning ‘night stinger’. The genus Latrodectus includes a number of species with a nasty reputation such as the black widow of North America and the Australian redback spider.

Katipo like sandy beaches (especially dune systems with native vegetation). The range for katipo covers much of the coast of the North Island and extends down as far as Dunedin on the South Island’s eastern side. On the South Island’s west coast they are known from Greymouth north.

The female katipo looks is pea-sized and satiny black. Her abdomen is marked with a red stripe on top and a red hourglass below. However, a completely black form of katipo can be found in the northern half of the North Island. Going by the unimaginative common name of black katipo, it has been considered a separate species (Latrodectus atritus) in its own right.

However, a recently published study I was involved with found otherwise. I joined forces with Christchurch-based scientists Cor Vink, Adrian Paterson and Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte, fellow Wellingtonian James Griffiths and US-based Pierre Paquin to see just how different the two types of katipo really were.

We looked at DNA, body measurements, cross-breeding and more besides only to find no meaningful differences aside from the absence of a red stripe in black katipo females. In short, they are not different enough to warrant being treated as two separate species.

Why then do we get the black form of katipo in northern New Zealand? We found a strong correlation between higher annual mean temperature and the presence of black katipo. Darker colouration tends to be associated with a need to absorb more heat, something we wouldn’t expect in the warmer, northern parts of the country. What benefits (if any) the black katipo gets from the loss of her red markings is still a mystery to us but temperature may still have something to do with it.

My co-author Adrian Paterson has also blogged about this study and you can read his post here. Amongst other things, Adrian’s post gives more detail on how we evaluated the differences between the two forms. Readers interested in learning more about katipo and other spiders might like to visit the spider section on the Te Papa website.

There’ll be more on katipo and its close relatives next post.

Reference:  Cor J. Vink, Phil J. Sirvid, Jagoba Malumbres-Olarte, James W. Griffiths, Pierre Paquin and Adrian M. Paterson (2008).  Species status and conservation issues of New Zealand’s endemic Latrodectus spider species (Araneae : Theridiidae). Invertebrate Systematics 22(6): 589-604.

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