<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">JUMPING SPIDERS</p>
<p><span class="smcap">We</span> are not in the land of the jumping spiders or
Attidae, and our few and sober-coloured examples of
the group give but a feeble idea of the Attid fauna
of tropical countries where these creatures abound
and often rival the “ruby-tail” flies in the brilliancy
of their hues.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="f8" id="f8" /> <ANTIMG src="images/i_088.png" width-obs="200" height-obs="250" alt="Fig. 8. Salticus scenicus, female, × 4." /> <p class="caption">Fig. 8. <i>Salticus scenicus</i>, female, × 4.</p> </div>
<p>It is one of the largest groups, numbering several<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span>
thousand species, but the British list includes barely
thirty, and most of these are of rare occurrence, or at
all events exceedingly unlikely to be met with by any
but the most energetic collector. Indeed it may be
said that there is only one British species which we
may look forward with tolerable confidence to finding
upon some sunny wall or fence in the summer, in
whatever part of the country we may be. This is
<i>Salticus scenicus</i>, sometimes called the Zebra Spider.
Though absolutely dowdy in comparison with most of
its tropical cousins, it is a not unattractive little
creature, and illustrates sufficiently well the characteristics
of its tribe. Armed with a pocket-lens,
a glass tube or two, and—more necessary still—the
very largest amount of patience we can summon, we
go in quest of the zebra spider. A tarred fence is
a good hunting ground, because the spider, if present,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span>
is readily seen, but if this is drawn blank we must
have recourse to a wall, where sharper eyesight will
be required.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="f9" id="f9" /> <ANTIMG src="images/i_089.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="157" alt="Fig. 9. “Face” of an Attid spider, shewing the anterior eyes and the chelicerae." /> <p class="caption">Fig. 9. “Face” of an Attid spider, shewing the anterior eyes and the chelicerae.</p> </div>
<p>Our quarry is of small size, not more than a
quarter of an inch long in the body, which resembles
that of the wolf-spiders in build, the abdomen not
rising above the level of the fore-body or cephalothorax.
It is thickly clothed with short hairs—black,
white, and grey—so arranged as to show oblique zebra-like
stripes on either side of the abdomen. The legs
are short and robust, very different from the long
thin limbs of the garden-spider; especially strong
are the fore-legs. The head is broad and square,
with a high perpendicular forehead, but the most
remarkable features are the eyes.</p>
<p>On the vertical front are four splendid eyes. The
wolf-spider’s eyes were large, but these, in comparison,
are immense, especially the median pair. Their axes
are directed straight in front. Four other eyes are<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>
placed on the top of the head, far apart from each
other, the more forward pair very small, the hind pair
of moderate size. In some Attid spiders these great
anterior eyes are wonderful objects under the microscope,
deep sea-green in hue and fringed with coloured
hairs. They form a veritable battery which the spider
brings to bear upon the object of its chase. Human
eyes, to match them in comparative size, would literally
have to be as large as saucers!</p>
<p>If we are in luck, we soon descry a <i>Salticus</i>
showing up boldly against the black surface of the
fence, and to set ourselves to watch its antics attentively.
One thing strikes us at once; it is quite at
home on a perpendicular surface—nay, on the under
side of a horizontal beam, for that matter. Now
a garden-spider would have great difficulty in maintaining
itself in such a position unless well supplied
with silken lines to which to cling; evidently there
is some difference in the structure of the feet of these
spiders which may be worth investigating later on.</p>
<p>Also we notice some odd tricks of movement in
the jumping spider; a curious way of exploring the
surface on which it is working by a succession of
short runs alternately with periods of absolute stillness
as though on the <i>qui vive</i>; a noticeable freedom of
movement between the fore- and the hind-bodies so
that its battery of eyes may be directed to this
side or that; sometimes an elevation of fore part<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>
as though for the purpose of obtaining a wider
view.</p>
<p>We may have to wait long before we see it
successful in the chase. It will often patiently
explore a large area, testing the surface with its palps
as it goes, without any obvious reward. It conscientiously
searches all depressions and crannies,
and, sometimes remains in them for a considerable
time—perhaps to devour some minute creature
which did not call into play its special methods of
attack. At last it sights a small insect which has
alighted on the fence a few inches away; we see
it turn its head in that direction and remain motionless.
Soon it begins to edge nearer in a stealthy
manner, striving to approach its prey from behind,
till, with a sudden spring, it pounces on its back.
Not always is the spring successful; often the insect
sees its peril at the last moment and takes to wing.
But in this case, how does the spider avoid a fall?
We see, what we had not noticed before, that it is
anchored to the fence by a silken line; indeed all
the time it has been hunting it has been trailing
behind it an exceedingly fine thread of silk which
it has attached at frequent intervals to the fence, so
that it can check its fall at will in the case of accident.
At the right angle, we may see the delicate filaments
glistening in the sun over the surface of its explorations.
The garden-spider entangles its prey in a web,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span>
the wolf-spider runs it down by sheer strength and
speed, but the jumping spider stalks it like a Red
Indian.</p>
<p>The actions of the spider make it quite evident
that its power of sight is well developed. Mr and
Mrs Peckham, whose remarkable observations on the
mating habits of jumping spiders must presently be
considered, established friendly relations with some
of their captives which became so tame as to jump
on their hands and take food from their fingers.
They frequently induced them to jump from a finger
of one hand to one of the other, gradually increasing
the distance up to eight inches. They also twice
observed a male chasing a female upon a table
covered with jars, books and boxes. “The female
would leap rapidly from one object to another, or
would dart over the edge of a book or a box so as to
be out of sight. In this position she would remain
quiet for a few moments and then, creeping to the
edge, would peer over to see if the male were still
pursuing her. If he happened not to be hidden, she
would seem to see him, even when ten or twelve
inches away, and would quickly draw back.”</p>
<p>Moreover that they have the ability to discriminate
colours has been shown by their behaviour when
imprisoned in cages consisting of a series of communicating
chambers each with a glass top of a
different hue. They show a marked preference for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>
the red chamber under these circumstances while the
least attractive colour seems to be blue.</p>
<p>It has been known for a long time that the males
of many kinds of birds—and especially of the more
ornamental species—are accustomed to perform the
most extraordinary antics in the presence of the
female at the time of mating. The Peckhams made
the unexpected discovery that precisely similar
“love dances” took place in the case of the jumping
spiders. Even the comparatively sober-coloured
“zebra spider” performs a weird <i>pas seul</i> in courting
its mate, but its display is feeble compared with that
of some of the more ornate of the Attidae.</p>
<p>Certain isolated observations on captive jumping
spiders led these observers to suspect that the
mating habits were unusual and worthy of accurate
investigation, and they laid their plans accordingly,
taking their summer holiday a month earlier than
usual, so as to miss nothing of the pairing season,
and including in their party an artist whose drawings
should furnish an indubitable record of the attitudes
assumed by the male spiders in their evolutions.</p>
<p>On arriving at their destination they found a
small species, <i>Saitis pulex</i>, with no great claims to
remarkable beauty, mature, and ready to pair. A
female was placed in one of the experimental boxes
which had been provided in advance, and a male was
admitted on the following day. He sighted her at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span>
a distance of twelve inches, and showing signs of
excitement, advanced to within about four inches and
then performed a most ludicrous dance—something
in the nature of a “highland fling,” in a semicircle
before her, she, in the meantime, moving in such a
manner as to keep him always in view. His exact
behaviour was this: he extended all the legs—and the
palp—on the left side, folding the first two legs and
the palp of the right side under him, and leaning
over sideways so far as nearly to lose his balance,
and in this attitude he sidled along towards the
lowered (right) side till he had described an arc of
about two inches; then the position was instantly
reversed, the right legs being extended and the left
folded under, and the arc retraced. A male was
seen to repeat this performance 111 times! He
then approached nearer and when almost within
reach “whirled madly around and around her, she
joining and whirling with him,” after which she
accepted him as a mate.</p>
<p>The next species to engage attention was an <i>Icius</i>.
It was noteworthy that although the neighbourhood
was well known to the experimenters they had never
met with this spider before, but for a few days it
swarmed on the fences just as birds are known to
assemble from all quarters for the so-called “love
dances.” After the mating season the spiders wandered
off into the woods again and were seen no more.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span></p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="f10" id="f10" /> <ANTIMG src="images/i_095.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="267" alt="Fig. 10. A male Attid spider (Astia vittata) dancing before the female. (After Peckham.)" /> <p class="caption">Fig. 10. A male Attid spider (<i>Astia vittata</i>) dancing before the female. (After Peckham.)</p> </div>
<p>The performance was much as before, but the spiders
assumed different attitudes. The female lay flat on
the ground with her front legs raised; the male
danced on the six hind legs, with the front legs
lowered and meeting at the tips. The males of
this species were exceedingly quarrelsome, sparring
frantically whenever they met, but their battles were
entirely bloodless. “Indeed,” say the observers,
“having watched hundreds of seemingly terrible
battles between the males of this and other species,
the conclusion has been forced upon us that they are
all sham affairs, gotten up for the purpose of
displaying before the females, who commonly stand
by, interested spectators.” In the case of one species,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span>
after two weeks of hard fighting between the males,
the Peckhams were unable to discover one wounded
warrior. The females, on the other hand, were
often really formidable. <i>Phidippus morsitans</i> is an
example. The male has handsome front legs, thickly
fringed with white hairs, and he displays these to
the best advantage in his love antics. Two males
supplied in succession to one female “had offered her
only the merest civilities when she leaped upon them
and killed them.”</p>
<p>In the case of most of the spiders whose love-dances
were investigated, the chief ornamentation
of the male consisted of fringes of white or coloured
hairs on the face, the palps, and the front legs, and
they kept these parts always before the females,
displaying their glories to the utmost advantage.
The male of <i>Habrocestum splendens</i>, however, possesses
an extremely brilliant abdomen, and, lest
anything of its beauty should be lost upon the object
of his admiration, he varies the ordinary performance
in a remarkable manner. He often pauses in the
dance, and, raising his abdomen, “strikes an attitude”
in which he remains motionless for half a minute.
Moreover he frequently turns his back on the female—a
most unusual occurrence in the course of these
antics.</p>
<p>The males of one species, <i>Philaeus militaris</i>, were
observed to capture and keep guard over young<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
females, which they imprisoned in webs spun for the
purpose until they had undergone their last moult
and were mature, chasing away all intruders in the
interval.</p>
<p>The jumping spiders furnish a much stronger case
for those who believe that ornamentation plays an
important part in sexual selection than do either birds
or butterflies. With regard to the birds it has been
objected, first, that there is little evidence that the
females pay much attention to the antics of the
males, and secondly, that practically all the male
birds pair, whatever their claims to pre-eminent
beauty. Now in the case of the jumping spiders the
females follow the performances of the males with
the utmost attention, and seeing that the males are
present in large numbers when the females begin to
appear, the latter are certainly in the position to
reject such mates as do not please them.</p>
<p>The mere relation of the results of this most
interesting investigation conveys no hint of the
unwearied patience and close observation necessary
to those who would surprise the secrets of nature.
One is apt to infer that it is only needful to place
some spiders in a box, establish oneself in an arm
chair, and ring on the performance, so to speak.
The Peckhams modestly remark: “The courtship of
spiders is a very tedious affair. We shall condense
our descriptions as much as possible, but it must be<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span>
noted that we often worked four or five hours a day
for a week in getting a fair idea of the habits of a
single species.”</p>
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