4.5 Article

Blood-red colour as a prey choice cue for mosquito specialist predators

Journal

ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR
Volume 188, Issue -, Pages 85-97

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.anbehav.2022.04.003

Keywords

cognition; perceptual bias; predatory specialization; prey choice; Salticidae; spider

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [IOS-1557867, IOS-1831751]
  2. NSF graduate research fellowship
  3. NSF East Asia and Pacific Summer Institute fellowship
  4. American Arachnological Society
  5. National Geographic Society [WW-146R-17, 8676-09, 6705-00]
  6. Marsden Fund from Royal Society of New Zealand [UOC305, UOC0507, UOC1301]
  7. Royal Society of New Zealand
  8. Foundation for Research, Science and Technology Postdoctoral Fellowship [UOCX0903]
  9. U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (National Institutes of Health) [R01-AI077722]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates how the East African jumping spider Evarcha culicivora identifies blood-carrying mosquitoes using the color red. The research shows that the spiders exhibit the strongest preference for blood-carrying mosquitoes in the first 6 hours after the mosquitoes have fed on blood. Red dye manipulation demonstrates that the spiders consistently prefer red-dyed mosquitoes over grey-dyed mosquitoes.
Specialist predators are innately and distinctively proficient at targeting specific prey types. This is enabled by behavioural, perceptual and cognitive mechanisms that can only be understood using carefully designed experiments. Evarcha culicivora is an East African jumping spider that feeds on vertebrate blood acquired indirectly by actively targeting blood-carrying female mosquitoes as preferred prey. Here we asked whether these spiders use the colour red to identify this prey. In Objective 1, we used spectrophotometry to document the changing redness of mosquitoes in the first 17 h following blood meals. In Objective 2, we used vision-based choice tests to document how E. culicivora's preference for blood-carrying mosquitoes changes over time (using an interval comparable to that in Objective 1). We found the strongest preference for blood-carrying mosquitoes during the first 6 h after those mosquitoes had fed on blood and that this time interval corresponded to when mosquitoes exhibit the reddest coloration. Based on this, we then took mosquitoes that had never fed on blood and manipulated their colour using a blend of red food dye to make them appear blood-fed (i.e. by matching their spectral properties to mosquitoes that had fed on blood within the previous 6 h). We also created grey-dyed mosquitoes that matched the spectral properties of those that had never fed on blood. In Objective 3, there was no evidence of E. culicivora visually discriminating between our red-dyed mosquitoes and blood-carrying mosquitoes; this indicates that, to E. culicivora, our red-dyed mosquitoes appropriately resembled blood-carrying mosquitoes. Finally, in Objective 4, we show that E. culicivora consistently preferred red-dyed mosquitoes over grey-dyed mosquitoes, supporting the hypothesis that E. culicivora uses some aspect of red coloration to identify their preferred prey. We discuss how these findings relate to cognitive processes, colour-based communication and sensory exploitation.(c) 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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