Spiders are well known for their silk and its varying use across taxa. Very few studies have examined the silk spigot ontogeny of the entire spinning field of a spider. Historically the spider phylogeny was based on morphological data and behavioral data associated with silk. Recent phylogenomics studies have shifted major paradigms in our understanding of silk use evolution, reordering phylogenetic relationships that were once thought to be monophyletic. Considering this, we explored spigot ontogeny in 22 species, including and reported here for the first time. This is the first study of its kind and the first to incorporate the Araneae Tree of Life. After rigorous testing for phylogenetic signal and model fit, we performed 60 phylogenetic generalized least squares analyses on adult female and second instar spigot morphology. Six analyses had significant correlation coefficients, suggesting that instar, strategy, and spigot variety are good predictors of spigot number in spiders, after correcting for bias of shared evolutionary history. We performed ancestral character estimation of singular, fiber producing spigots on the posterior lateral spinneret whose potential homology has long been debated. We found that the ancestral root of our phylogram of 22 species, with the addition of five additional cribellate and ecribellate lineages, was more likely to have either none or a modified spigot rather than a pseudoflagelliform gland spigot or a flagelliform spigot. This spigot ontogeny approach is novel and we can build on our efforts from this study by growing the dataset to include deeper taxon sampling and working towards the capability to incorporate full ontogeny in the analysis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.4233 | DOI Listing |
J Arachnol
April 2024
University Instrumentation Center, University of New Hampshire, Parsons Hall W123, 23 Academic Way, Durham, New Hampshire 03824, USA.
As in other Palpimanidae, two pairs of posterior spinnerets present in typical Araneomorphae are vestigial in Kulczyński, 1909, with only the anterior lateral spinneret (ALS) pair prominent. Nevertheless, in late juvenile and adult females, spigots appear in the ancestral posterior spinneret region (PS). Consistent with these spigots serving cylindrical silk glands, females construct substantial egg sacs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeerJ
January 2018
Museum of Southwestern Biology, Division of Arthropods, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, United States of America.
Spiders are well known for their silk and its varying use across taxa. Very few studies have examined the silk spigot ontogeny of the entire spinning field of a spider. Historically the spider phylogeny was based on morphological data and behavioral data associated with silk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Today
July 2014
Division of General Thoracic Surgery, Department of Surgery, Shiga University of Medical Science, Tsukinowacho Seta Otsu, Shiga, 520-2192, Japan,
We report a rare case of pulmonary metastasis of invasive thymoma, with endobronchial polypoid growth causing hemosputum in a 77-year-old man. The patient had been admitted 8 years earlier for the treatment of invasive thymoma and had undergone extended thymo-thymectomy through a mid-sternotomy, followed by a course of radiotherapy. Pulmonary metastases developed 3 years after surgery, for which the patient received several courses of chemotherapy; however, the tumor continued to progress gradually.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Qual
August 2009
SimBiotic Software, 407 E. Main St., Missoula, MT 59802, USA.
In the Central Arizona-Phoenix (CAP) ecosystem, managers divert mixed stream water and groundwater to maintain an artificial lake chain in Indian Bend Wash (IBW), a historically flashy, ephemeral, desert stream. Nutrient concentrations in the CAP ecosystem's groundwater, stream water, and floodwater differ: stream water has low concentrations of both inorganic N and P, while groundwater is low in inorganic P but rich in nitrate (NO(3)(-)). Consequently, groundwater contribution drives inorganic N concentrations in the lake chain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArthropod Struct Dev
March 2006
School of Integrative Biology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia.
This study provides comprehensive documentation of silk production in the pest moth Helicoverpa armigera from gland secretion to extrusion of silk thread. The structure of the silk glands, accessory structures and extrusion apparatus are reported. The general schema of the paired silk glands follows that found for Lepidoptera.
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