<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">STRIDULATION</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Many</span> of the Arthropoda—the large group which
includes insects and crustaceans as well as Arachnida—are
able to produce sounds, a fact familiar enough
in such insects as crickets and grass-hoppers. As,
however, the breathing apparatus of these animals is
entirely different from that of mammals and has no
connection whatever with the mouth and alimentary
canal, the mode of sound production is not at all the
same. Instead of setting vocal chords in vibration
by the expulsion of air through the larynx, insects
“sing” or “chirp” by rapidly rubbing together
certain specially roughened surfaces, which constitute
what is called a “stridulating organ.” In crickets, for
instance, each tegmen or wing-cover is provided with
a kind of file, and when the wing-covers are rapidly
vibrated, the edge of each rubs against the opposite
file, and a loud shrill sound is produced.</p>
<p>The stridulating apparatus is by no means always
in the same place; the thorax may rub against the
abdomen, the leg against the wing-cover, or one of
the mouth appendages against another. Nor are
the sounds produced always audible to human ears;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span>
at all events there are many creatures with what
appear to be very well developed stridulating organs
whose note has never yet been heard by any naturalist,
but there are doubtless numberless sounds beyond the
range of our hearing, which is limited, like the keyboard
of a piano.</p>
<p>Now such a stridulating apparatus has been detected
in many spiders, and always in one of three
situations—either between the two parts of the body
(cephalothorax and abdomen) or between the palps
and the mandibles, or between the palps and the front
legs. In some of the Theridiidae the hind end of the
cephalothorax is roughened and fits into a sort of
socket in the abdomen which is provided with parallel
ridges, so that when the abdomen is vibrated the two
surfaces are rubbed together, but no one has yet
heard a sound produced by these spiders. The
stridulating Aviculariidae, however, are easily heard,
the sound in some cases being described as a kind of
whistle,—in others it has been said to have the effect
of shot dropping upon a plate.</p>
<p>There are two quite distinct purposes for which
sounds may be produced; they may either serve as
a call from one sex to the other, or as a warning to
intruders. Obviously the first purpose requires a
sense of hearing in the sex appealed to, and it is
interesting to note that in the Theridiidae, which are
among the spiders which show some appreciation of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span>
sound, the organ is well developed in the male only,
being rudimentary or altogether absent in the female,
while in the Aviculariidae, which appear to be quite
deaf, both sexes possess it equally. In them its
function is probably to warn off its enemies—a
purpose for which it is not at all necessary that the
spider itself should hear it.</p>
<p>Sometimes sounds have been quite wrongly attributed
to spiders; there is, for example, an Australian
species widely known among natives as the “barking”
or “booming” spider, for no better reason than that
the spider has been found in the day-time at a spot
where the booming was heard at night. This case was
investigated by Professor Baldwin Spencer, who found
that quails were really responsible for the sounds
with which the spider was credited. The creature
could, however, achieve a kind of whistle by rubbing
its palps against its mandibles. Its stridulating
apparatus was of the type common among the
Aviculariidae. Its principle is that of the musical
box, where nail-like projections on a barrel strike
against the teeth of a metal comb, except that the
barrel is stationary and the comb is moved up and
down against it. The barrel is here represented by
the first joint of the mandible which is beset on its
outer side with spines. The inner edge of the first
joint of the palp is furnished with “keys” which are
rubbed against the mandible spines when the palps<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span>
are vibrated. These keys are very curious structures.
They are of various lengths, and their shape will
perhaps be understood when it is said that a tolerable
model of one would be obtained by taking a flat iron
bar, sharpening it at the end, and then so twisting it
in the middle that the flat surface of one half is at
right-angles to the flat surface of the other half. Its
appearance therefore varies according to the point of
view, the narrow edge of one half and the broad edge
of the other being visible at the same time. A moment’s
consideration will show that this torsion is calculated
to give great rigidity to the keys, for when the outer
half is struck on the flat surface the inner half opposes
its greatest diameter to the shock. A similar structure
is found in all the Theraphosid spiders which are able<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</SPAN></span>
to produce a sound, though sometimes the “keys”
are on the mandibles and the spines on the palp.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="f11" id="f11" /> <ANTIMG src="images/i_119.png" width-obs="400" height-obs="246" alt="Fig. 11. Three “keys” of a stridulating organ, after Spencer." /> <p class="caption">Fig. 11. Three “keys” of a stridulating organ, after Spencer.</p> </div>
<p>In Staten Island there is a wolf-spider—<i>Lycosa
kochi</i>—which is known as the “purring” or “drumming”
spider because of a curious habit which the male
has, at mating time, of rapidly drumming on the dead
leaves in a wood with its palps. It runs hither and
thither over the ground as if in search of something,
pausing at short intervals to “purr,” and the sound
had frequently been heard and correctly attributed
to the spider before the way in which it is produced
was discovered. In this case it is probable that the
production of sound is not the object of the spider at
all, for we have no evidence that wolf-spiders hear.
On the other hand rapid tapping with the palps is
a very characteristic action with male spiders at
mating time, and it is easy to believe that contiguous
dry leaves would conduct vibrations to a female at
some distance away and inform her of the presence
of the male. Just so, as we have seen, our English
Theraphosid announces his arrival by tapping on the
exposed part of the nest of the female.</p>
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