what do spiders eat  
 

Feeding Habits Of Spiders
By Nikki

A look at the feeding habits of the spider species are living animals and they therefore need to eat just as you and I need to eat. Because are predatory animals eating means first catching some other living animal. Most are not fussy, though some have definite preferences and some have specific hunting techniques that catch them a particular type of prey.

Most eat only living or freshly killed food, and most are not particular about their prey. Having said this many will take dead prey in captivity and in some species it is not uncommon for to be scavengers when the opportunity arises. For example the Mouse Spider (Scotophaeus) is known to steal dead insects in the wild. Also certain social are known to scavenge the dead bodies of other colony members.

Spiders can taste their food and some items are rejected because of taste. Unlike humans however, taste their food with their tarsi using chemosensitive hairs. Thus if you keep you will notice that some will not eat certain bugs and ticks. Different species of spider have different ideas about what is good to eat and what isn't. For instance many won't eat woodlice although the house in the genera Tegenaria will.

However there are some spiders, and groups of spiders, that do have particular prey items they specialise in. Among these are in the genera Dysdera specialise in eating woodlice, preferring them to other foods. Other with specialised tastes include the Pirate in the family Mimetidae which live exclusively on other spiders.

Pirate protect themselves by having a potent quick acting toxin that immobilises their prey after just one quick bite to a leg extremity. They will also trick out of their retreats by mimicking mates of prey caught in the web.

There are also ant in the family Zodariidae that specialise in eating ants. Ants are potentially dangerous prey and Zodariids such as those in the genus Zodarium that eat ants attack their prey quickly making a single bite and then moving away until the ant is overcome.

Ants are very common animals in most environments and it is not surprising therefore that there are ant specialists in other spider families, Callilepsis nocturna from the Gnaphosidae (on Formica spp.) and species of Salticidae on Pseudomyrmex spp.

For that actively hunt their prey the first step in catching dinner is to locate it. that choose to sit outside their burrows or hideaways and wait for some suitable organism to wander past like some tarantulas and wandering spiders, rely on vibrations to tell them what is going on.

Such as Cupennius can hunt just as effectively with their eyes covered as with them working. However that go out actively looking for prey and hunt it down, such the wolf and particularly the jumping rely much more heavily on sight.

Nearly all use venom to immobilise their prey before feeding. This makes it easy for them to feed on otherwise dangerous animals. Some Crab will catch Bumble Bees far heavier than themselves.

Whichever way the prey is caught it needs to be eaten and practice what is called external digestion. This means that enzymes and other digestive juices are injected or spat into the prey's body. The soft tissues are broken down by these juices and sucked up by the spider. For spiders, soup is the only thing on the menu.

Some such as tarantulas and many of the orb-web use the teeth on the basal segment of the chelicerae to mash their prey while they are feeding. In these cases all that remains after the spider has finished is a small dark blob of cuticle. Smaller spiders, especially those that feed on larger prey such as the Thomisidae bite only a small hole in the cuticle of their prey and suck the juices out through this. In this case what is left is a pretty intact shell of the prey animal.

While most feed on invertebrates most of the time, they will take vertebrates when they can. Reports of Dolmedes catching small fish several times her own weight, of Leucorhestris taking small lizards up to its own weight and of Lycosids and Pisaurids catching tadpoles and small fish are fairly well documented. Evidence of large taking small birds is also known in the tropics.

Tales of tarantulas taking snakes in the wild are harder to verify though the first description of them doing so was written by the Roman Pliny 2000 years ago. However there is no doubt they will take them in captivity and therefore probably would take them in the wild when the opportunity arrives. In captivity tarantulas have been recorded killing and eating 30cm pit vipers and 45cm rattlesnakes as well as frogs and lizards.

Stranger still, in 1924 Reginald Pocock described finding a Poecilotheria regalis feeding on a rat in India, though no mention is made of whether the spider actually killed the rat. Strangest of all is a tale from Australia written in 1919 by a Mr Chisolm.

He describes finding a chicken that had been killed and dragged 16 metres (50 feet) to a burrow by a Barking Spider Selenocosima spp.. The chicken was much too big to be pulled into the hole and was found with one leg down the hole with the spider hanging on to that leg.


 
 
  Here are some articles about spiders for you to read..  
 
 
Spiders’ Increasing Popularity As Exotic Pets
By Carol J.Harera
Each year millions of family pets are lost, and end up at shelters that have no idea who these pets belong to, or how to contact the owners to return the pets. But, something as simple as a pet tag Read more...
Common Myths About Tarantula Spiders
By Nikki
A look at some of the myths that have propogated through the years about the Tarantula Spider able Read more...
 
 
 
 
   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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