Scientist uses tiny trackers to keep tabs on funnel-web spiders
Send a link to a friend
[March 02, 2022]
By Jill Gralow
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Some Sydney funnel-web
spiders are scrambling into the Australian brush carrying special cargo:
a telemetry tracker to study how far a mature male can travel at night
and whether their movements are affected by the environment and weather.
Caitlin Creak, a PhD candidate at the School of Biological, Earth and
Environmental Sciences of the University of New South Wales, has been
tracking the male Sydney funnel-web, one of the world's deadliest
spiders, for two summers. The nocturnal arachnid lives within around
100km (62 miles) of Australia's largest city, and is mostly active
between November and April.
Having grown up in Australia's bushland, the 27-year-old is no stranger
to spiders, but her love for them grew after she learned about them
during her biology degree, and interacted with the creatures she thinks
are wonderful.
Most studies on the Sydney funnel-web spider are about its venom and
taxonomy, but Creak's study focuses on its behaviour and ecology.
"The Sydney funnel-web has a human-lethal venom, which is just a bit of
an evolutionary coincidence, as we suspect at this stage," she said.
"That's kind of all we know about them to be honest. We don't actually
really know anything else in terms of their behaviour, their biology or
their ecology."
To be able to attach the tracker, the spider must first be knocked out
with carbon dioxide, a standard practice for sedating invertebrates,
Creak said.
As the spider dozes for a couple of minutes on a wet sponge that keeps
it hydrated, Creak places a second sponge around its head to safely glue
the small tracking device, slightly bigger than a grain of rice, to its
fused head and thorax, called the cephalothorax.
[to top of second column]
|
Caitlin Creak, PhD candidate from the School of Biological Earth and
Environmental Sciences at the University of New South Wales, holds a
male Sydney funnel-web spider with a telemetry tracker attached, in
a container, in Sydney, Australia February 18, 2022. REUTERS/Jill
Gralow
Creak is extremely cautious when
handling the spider, never touching them with her hands. Instead,
she uses 30cm-long forceps and when awake, the spider is kept in a
thick plastic container.
Weather permitting, Creak tracks the spider daily for as long as the
trackers stay functional. They can sometimes become dislodged, and
the tiny batteries last about a month.
"In the morning, I'll come back, and I'll be able to see how far
he's gone overnight," said Creak. "Once they're used to having a
tracker on, they're off. They can go, God, anywhere between a metre
to 60 metres in a night, that I've recorded."
It is no easy task to track the arachnids. With a receiver and
antenna, Creak must tread carefully over vegetation, logs and leaf
litter. The telemetry tracker on the spider sends beeps to the
receiver as Creaks gets close.
Australia has many species of funnel-webs but only the male Sydney
funnel-web is responsible for human deaths. Only 13 deaths have been
recorded but more than 30 people are bitten by the spider each year,
according to the Australian Museum.
"We're with them all the time, we might as well try and coexist and
to do that, we need to know more about them," Creak said of spiders
during a recent tracking expedition.
(Reporting by Jill Gralow. Editing by Gerry Doyle and Karishma
Singh)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |