Catherine Wu’s research while affiliated with University of California, Los Angeles and other places

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Figure 1.-A map of the 34 colony sites, created using the 2004 map of the Cocha Cashu trail system, courtesy of the Cocha Cashu website, accessed 29 April, 2020, https://cochacashu.sandiegozooglobal.org/maps/
Figure 3.-(a) Distribution of size and sex classes of spiders by region within the colony webs. For each web region, size and sex classes are in the same order, from left to right, as shown in (b). (b) Variation in the frequency of aggression per individual by size and sex class (n ¼ 14 colonies). Six colonies were excluded from this analysis because one or two female size classes were absent. (c) Observed rates of aggression per capita in relation to colony web region. Box plots show the following statistical values: the thick horizontal line indicates the median, the lower and upper boundaries of the box indicate the 25 th and 75 th percentile values (Q1 and Q3) respectively, the box represents the interquartile range (IQR), the whiskers represent the minimum (Q1 -1.5(IQR)) and maximum (Q3 þ 1.5(IQR)) values without outliers, and the circles represent outlier values.
Figure 4.-Effects of web type on the responses of resident females to simulated intruders. In (c) the height of the bars represents the total number of resident females observed in each ending position across all trials. Box plot definitions as in Fig. 3.
Figure 5.-Translocation experiment results. (a) Variation in the total number of interactions between colony members and translocated individuals. (b) Variation in the total number of aggressive interactions between colony members and translocated individuals. Box plot definitions as in Fig. 3.
-Web size PCA loading matrix.
Aggression in a western Amazonian colonial spider, Philoponella republicana (Araneae: Uloboridae)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

October 2022

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37 Reads

Journal of Arachnology

Catherine Wu

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Chaiti Bhagawat

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Modan R. Goldman

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[...]

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Group-living spiders are rare, and can be divided into multiple subcategories based on their tolerance of group mates. While social spiders are cooperative, colonial spiders are often antagonistic towards conspecifics. We examined colony dynamics in a colonial species, Philoponella republicana (Simon, 1891), focusing on aggressive behaviors to further understand this understudied species. We studied whether web region, sex ratio, web size, or spider size affected aggression. We also tested whether colony members discriminate against conspecific intruders, since this behavior, known as group closure, is prevalent in many other group-living animals but had not yet been tested in colonial spiders. Colony mates were often aggressive due to competition for limited resources, such as mates and orb webs, yet several characteristics of this species may reduce these competitive forces. First, female-biased secondary sex ratios appear to reduce male-male and female-male competition. Moreover, although some individuals defended orb webs, other areas in the communal web were not defended. Philoponella republicana also did not exhibit group closure. Our results further confirm that aggression between males decreases in colonies with more female-biased secondary sex ratios, and larger individuals correlate with a higher frequency of aggressive interactions. Moreover, we raise new questions concerning the evolutionary pressures that shape coloniality in spiders.

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