1. Glyphosate-based herbicide has contrasting effects on prey capture by two co-occurring wolf spider species.
- Author
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Rittman S, Wrinn KM, Evans SC, Webb AW, and Rypstra AL
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Glycine pharmacology, Male, Species Specificity, Time Factors, Glyphosate, Glycine analogs & derivatives, Herbicides pharmacology, Predatory Behavior drug effects, Spiders drug effects, Spiders physiology
- Abstract
Anthropogenic substances have the potential to affect animal behavior either because they present a novel stimulus or because they interfere with natural chemical communication pathways. Such shifts can alter the dynamic between predators and potential prey, which might affect population success as well as the strength of food web linkages. We examined the foraging of two wolf spiders, Tigrosa helluo and Pardosa milvina (Araneae, Lycosidae), that are abundant in agroecosystems where they are routinely exposed to herbicides. We tested the hypothesis that the presence of a commercial formulation of a glyphosate-based herbicide would affect the prey capture behavior of these two wolf spiders. We tested the larger Tigrosa foraging on Pardosa or crickets (Acheta domesticus) and the smaller Pardosa foraging on crickets. Tigrosa subdued crickets more quickly and with fewer lunges than it took them to capture Pardosa. The presence of herbicide allowed Tigrosa to orient toward and capture both prey species more quickly but it did not affect the number of lunges required to subdue either prey. Herbicide did not affect the timing of prey capture for Pardosa but it did cause them to use more lunges in the process. Thus, herbicide had contrasting effects on foraging behavior of these two agrobiont predators, which means that it could shift the direction and strength of food web linkages in complex ways.
- Published
- 2013
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