Ilex Hairstreak Satyrium ilicis, photographed at Chaumussay last June.
He discovered that his Hairstreaks successfully evaded jumping spiders every time, despite laying their eggs in an environment where the spider was abundant and persisently hunting. When he tried the jumping spiders on other species of lepidoptera, the spider caught the butterfly or moth every time. His conclusion was that Hairstreaks had evolved false eyes to evade spiders and other small arthropods, not birds or other large vertebrates.
Ilex Hairstreak.
Purple Hairstreak, Neozephyrus quercus, photographed in the Parc de Boussay, July 2011.
I suspect that this behaviour and evolutionary response also applies to other false eyed and tailed butterflies, such as the Short-tailed Blue Everes argiades and the Long-tailed Blue Lampides boeticus. I also think that the arachnid enemy here might be crab spiders. I've seen several of the beautiful red and black crab spider species Synaema globosum lurking about in the same Downy Oak tree at Chaumussay that I know the Ilex Hairstreak lays eggs in. They are less than a centimetre long, but will take prey the size of a Honey Bee.
Black Hairstreak Satyrium pruni, in the Brenne. Photograph courtesy of Tim of Aigronne Valley Wildlife.
The study also calls into question the visual acuity of these spiders -- maybe it's not as good as previously believed.
3 comments:
Thanks, Susan.
Very timely and will add to my information on adaptations, which I happen to be teaching... on Friday!
Nice to read about butterflies on such a miserable day!
And tareversuch for the link.
Une étude très intéressante. On voit souvent des papillons "porte queue" abîmés. Et l'araignée Synaema globosum , et d'autres Thomises arrivent en effet à capturer de grosses proies.
La nature offre a ces papillons un moyen de "tromper" le prédateur!
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