How to translate text using browser tools
1 December 2003 WATER SURFACE LOCOMOTION BY SPIDERS: DISTINCT GAITS IN DIVERSE FAMILIES
Robert B. Suter, Gail Stratton, Patricia R. Miller
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Pisaurids such as Dolomedes triton (Walckenaer 1837) are well known as inhabitants of ponds and streams and are adept at locomotion on the water surface. In a broad survey of water surface locomotion in spiders, we have found that most taxa do not use specialized gaits under these circumstances. However, some tetragnathids, araneids, and salticids (three families that are outside of the superfamily Lycosoidea to which the pisaurids belong) resemble D. triton to the extent that they do use specialized gaits when on the water surface. Of these, the tetragnathids are particularly accomplished at water surface locomotion, achieving velocities that exceed those of D. triton when it rows, but not when it gallops.

Robert B. Suter, Gail Stratton, and Patricia R. Miller "WATER SURFACE LOCOMOTION BY SPIDERS: DISTINCT GAITS IN DIVERSE FAMILIES," The Journal of Arachnology 31(3), 428-432, (1 December 2003). https://doi.org/10.1636/m02-22
Received: 26 April 2002; Published: 1 December 2003
KEYWORDS
aquatic locomotion
Araneidae
gaits
Gnaphosidae
Lycosidae
Philodromidae
Pisauridae
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission
Back to Top