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Maternal care and subsocial behaviour in spiders

Journal

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS
Volume 89, Issue 2, Pages 427-449

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/brv.12060

Keywords

competition; cooperation; dispersal; group-living; inbreeding; kin recognition; maternal care; parental care; spider; subsocial

Categories

Funding

  1. Department of Entomology at Cornell University
  2. PCCW (President's Council of Cornell's Women)
  3. Grace Griswold Fund

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While most spiders are solitary and opportunistically cannibalistic, a variety of social organisations has evolved in a minority of spider species. One form of social organisation is subsociality, in which siblings remain together with their parent for some period of time but disperse prior to independent reproduction. We review the literature on subsocial and maternal behaviour in spiders to highlight areas in which subsocial spiders have informed our understanding of social evolution and to identify promising areas of future research. We show that subsocial behaviour has evolved independently at least 18 times in spiders, across a wide phylogenetic distribution. Subsocial behaviour is diverse in terms of the form of care provided by the mother, the duration of care and sibling association, the degree of interaction and cooperation among siblings, and the use of vibratory and chemical communication. Subsocial spiders are useful model organisms to study various topics in ecology, such as kin recognition and the evolution of cheating and its impact on societies. Further, why social behaviour evolved in some lineages and not others is currently a topic of debate in behavioural ecology, and we argue that spiders offer an opportunity to untangle the ecological causes of parental care, which forms the basis of many other animal societies.

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