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1.
C R Biol ; 339(9-10): 408-16, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27527898

ABSTRACT

Spiders are known to commonly use aerial dispersal, so-called ballooning, especially at juvenile stages. They produce a silk thread that allows them to rise up in the air to disperse, which serves as inbreeding avoidance or to find an optimal over-winter habitat. Studies of phenology, species and meteorological factors associated with aerial dispersal have been limited to laboratory settings, with few data obtained under natural settings and no studies to date executed in France. To understand aerial dispersal, we conducted daily sampling between 2000 and 2002 at a height of 12m. For adults, high proportions of "ballooners" were observed during four seasonal peaks, with dispersal most prevalent during summer, while for juveniles dispersal was protracted across summer and fall. Linyphiidae is the most abundant family among the 10,879 individuals caught. We show a significant and negative influence of high wind speeds on ballooning, an effect that increased even under low temperatures (<19°C). At wind speeds greater than 4m·s(-1) dispersal becomes difficult, and is almost impossible beyond 5.5m·s(-1). Ballooning ability is reported for the first time for several species. This study increases our knowledge on aerial dispersal in spiders in an agricultural context. Such behaviour can be seen as a survival strategy to escape from a disturbed and unstable landscape.


Subject(s)
Flight, Animal , Spiders/physiology , Weather , Aging/physiology , Agriculture , Animals , Body Weight , Classification , Ecosystem , Seasons , Sex Characteristics , Silk , Spiders/classification , Temperature , Wind
2.
Zookeys ; (420): 11-8, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25061368

ABSTRACT

In this paper, we validate the doubtful species status of E. guianae, with redescriptions of (supposedly lost) type and holotype males, and a first description of the female. Both sexes are measured and illustrated by pictures of habitus and copulatory organs. Seventeen new salticid species for French Guiana are also reported and a detailed catalogue of all salticid species from the Trinité National Nature Reserve is provided.

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