TL;DR: The genus Runcinioides is revised, including the redescription of R. argenteus Mello-Leitão, 1929 and R. litteratus (Piza, 1933), and the known geographic distribution of both species is expanded with the inclusion of new occurrence data.
Abstract: The genus Runcinioides is revised, including the redescription of R. argenteus Mello-Leitao, 1929 and R. litteratus (Piza, 1933). The male of R. litteratus is described and illustrated for the first time and Misumenops paranensis (Mello-Leitao, 1932) is here considered a junior synonym of R. argenteus. The known geographic distribution of both species is expanded with the inclusion of new occurrence data. Runcinioides pustulatus Mello-Leitao, 1929 and Runcinioides souzai Soares, 1942 are not related to the other species of the genus, and provisionally considered as incertae sedis.
TL;DR: Results indicate that M. argenteus exerted a double positive effect on seed production in T. adenantha, and may be taxon specific and vary among years with different herbivore abundances.
Abstract: We examined the effects of the sit-and-wait spider Misumenops argenteus (Thomisidae) on the herbivore assemblage and fitness of the perennial woody shrub Trichogoniopsis adenantha (Asteraceae). Because crab spiders prey on both pollinators and phytophagous insects, they can have potentially negative and positive effects on plants. In a manipulative experiment using paired plants, spiders decreased the density of sucking and some endophagous herbivores on the leaves and capitula and reduced the number of damaged achenes produced by the plants. Damaged capitula had a higher proportion of fertilized achenes in plants with spiders than without spiders, but not undamaged capitula. These results indicate that M. argenteus exerted a double positive effect on seed production in T. adenantha. The effect of M. argenteus on herbivores may be taxon specific and vary among years with different herbivore abundances.
TL;DR: The results indicate that the spiders require time to respond to changes in environmental conditions, and showed a preference for wingless prey or prey that remained on the branches for longer periods of time.
Abstract: Seasonal fluctuations, phenology and diet of Misumenops argenteus (Araneae, Thomisidae) on Trichogoniopsis adenantha (Asteraceae) were investigated in the Serra do Japi, southeastern Brazil, over a 2 year period. This spider population increased at the beginning of the rainy season, reaching a peak in March, and decreased in May, reaching its lowest density in the cold/dry season. In the rainy season (December–May), most of the individuals were in the young or juvenile phase (3rd–6th instars). The spiders reached adulthood between the end of the cold/dry season and the beginning of the hot/rainy season. Analysis of temporal displacement (with up to a 3 month delay) detected a one month delay between the blooming period of T. adenantha and the beginning of the rainy season. The number of arthropods (potential prey of M. argenteus) on the plants increased concomitantly with the increase in the number of reproductive branches. The M. argenteus population also increased numerically 2 months after the...
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors extend detection of arthropod predator gut contents by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), heretofore restricted to insect predators, to spiders, and detect single individuals of the corn lead aphid, Rhopalosiphum maidis, were detected in the guts of spiderlings of Oxyopes salticus up to 12 hours after feeding.
Abstract: We extend detection of arthropod predator gut contents by polymerase chain reaction (PCR), heretofore restricted to insect predators, to spiders. Single individuals of the corn lead aphid, Rhopalosiphum maidis, were detected in the guts of spiderlings of Oxyopes salticus up to 12 h after feeding; individuals of the congeneric bird cherry oat aphid, R. padi, were not detected. Unfed O. salticus and Misumenops sp. were also negative.
TL;DR: Relations among island populations of the thomisid spider Misumenops rapaensis Berland, 1934 across the Austral Islands, a remote and rarely examined southern Pacific hot‐spot archipelago, allows an examination of genetic divergence and species accumulation in closely related lineages distributed across four Polynesian archipelagos.
Abstract: Aim Phylogenetic studies concerning island biogeography have been concentrated in a fraction of the numerous hot-spot archipelagos contained within the Pacific Ocean. In this study we investigate relationships among island populations of the thomisid spider Misumenops rapaensis Berland, 1934 across the Austral Islands, a remote and rarely examined southern Pacific hot-spot archipelago. We also assess the phylogenetic position of M. rapaensis in relation to thomisids distributed across multiple Polynesian archipelagos in order to evaluate the proposed hypothesis that thomisid spiders colonized Polynesia from multiple and opposing directions. The data allow an examination of genetic divergence and species accumulation in closely related lineages distributed across four Polynesian archipelagos.