• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer

Dr. Peter N Witt

Spiders, Drugs and Human Behavior

  • About Dr. Peter N Witt
    • Dr. Peter N Witt Biography
    • Memoirs
    • on To Tell the Truth
    • CV
    • Obituary
  • HUMAN INTEREST ARTICLES
    • 1940’s
    • 1950’s
    • 1960’s
    • 1970’s
    • 1980’s
  • SCIENTIFIC ARTICLES
    • 1940’s
    • 1950’s
    • 1960’s
    • 1970’s
    • 1980’s
  • BOOK
  • MOVIE
  • SPIDER & WEB GALLERY
You are here: Home / Projects / THE SHEET WEB AS A TRANSDUCER, MODIFYING VIBRATION SIGNALS IN SOCIAL SPIDER…NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS

THE SHEET WEB AS A TRANSDUCER, MODIFYING VIBRATION SIGNALS IN SOCIAL SPIDER…
NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS

May 1975

Download PDF

1975-TheSheetWebAsA
View this article in Search Friendly Plain Text
NOTE: This plain text article interpretation has been digitally created by OCR software to estimate the article text, to help both users and search engines find relevant article content.  To read the actual article text, view or download the PDF above.

 

REPRINTED FROM: NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS
SOCIETY FOR NEUROSCIENCE, 5TH ANNUAL MEETING
NEW YORK CITY 1975. PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
THE SHEET WEB AS A TRANSDUCER, MODIFYING VIBRATION SIGNALS IN SOCIAL
SPIDER COLONIES OF MALLOS GREGALIS« J. W. Burgess* (SPON: P. N. WITT).
North Carolina Mental Health Division, Raleigh, N. C. 27611.
The sheet web of Mallos gregalis tailors vibrations to fit the colony*8
behavior patterns. In a social context, it is important to locate
acceptable prey on the web and differentiate it from other colony members.
B. Krafft has identified close-range chemotactic signals Inhibiting pre-
dation in social spiders (Agelena consociata)« Mallos gregalis on three-
dimensional sheet-webs in nature and the laboratory orient to struggling
prey at distances over 10 cm, but do not orient to web vibrations caused
by colony members% Electronically generated vibration transmitted through
the web to a magnetic pick-up shows that transmission is limited to a band
between 50-500Hz (measured on an oscilloscope), and sine-wave vibration
is amplified at peaks within that band. Pure tones introduced on the web
over a range of 10-100,000Hz elicit predation behavior (orientation and
directional movement) only within the 50-500Hz band, proportional to the
web-response curve. Measured on the web, vibration of a trapped housefly
is prominent within the web-response band, recorded on a Brtiel and Kjaer
audio analyzer, while this vibration measured off web is spread over a
wide frequency range, from 50-5000Hz. The fly*s vibration is modified by
the web into a signal to which spiders readily respond, but other spiders
moving on the web do not generate measurable vibrations within this band.
Since intra-colony predation is not seen, it is suggested that the filter/
amplification characteristics of the web act to stimulate fly predation,
while inhibiting inter-spider predation. (Supported by NSF Grant GB25274
to P. N. Witt.)

Article Title & Publication

THE SHEET WEB AS A TRANSDUCER, MODIFYING VIBRATION SIGNALS IN SOCIAL SPIDER…
NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS

Published On

May 1975

Related Articles

1970's, Scientific Articles

More From

NEUROSCIENCE ABSTRACTS

Read Next:

No related posts found

Footer

Peter N Witt - Header Image
  • Dr. Peter N Witt’s Biography
  • Memoirs
  • Movie: Life on a Thread
  • Book: Spider Communication
  • Spider Web Gallery
  • Human Interest Articles
    • 1940’s
    • 1950’s
    • 1960’s
    • 1970’s
    • 1980’s
    • 1990’s
    • 2000’s
  • Scientific Articles
    • 1940’s
    • 1950’s
    • 1960’s
    • 1970’s
    • 1980’s

Created by Jessica Lily · Copyright © 1947–2025 Dr. Peter N. Witt · All Rights Reserved · Website provided by Elise and Mary Witt.

en English
ar Arabiczh-CN Chinese (Simplified)nl Dutchen Englishfr Frenchde Germanit Italianpt Portuguesees Spanish