Female Pseudeuophrys lanigera on building exterior in Seattle, Washington |
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Read Our Paper About First Pseudueophrys lanigera Records In North America
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Spider Traps Made Of Corrugated Plastic Perform Poorly In Wet Weather
Shortly after the New Year, I deployed another set of spider traps in the woods near my house in Seattle, Washington (USA). I had a number of questions I hoped these traps would answer about the introduced crab spider Ozyptila praticola (Thomisidae), including:
- Will O. praticola use traps made from corrugated plastic?
- Will O. praticola use traps made of rolled-up single-sided cardboard (the easiest trap to make)?
- Does the orientation (vertical, horizontal) of the corrugated channels make a difference?
Corrugated cardboard and plastic "stack" traps |
Corrugated cardboard "roll" traps |
I had recently found that small stacks of flute B cardboard placed in the crotches of shrubs work very well as O. praticola traps. Therefore, I made another set of these "stack" traps as a control. Next, I made a plastic version of the control traps, using corrugated plastic instead of cardboard. And finally, I rolled strips of single-face flute A cardboard into cylinders to make "roll" traps. This is the same material that I used previously for tree trunk bands. On 4-Jan I set out five cardboard stack traps, five plastic stack traps, and ten roll traps, each in the crotch of a different shrub. On 15-Jan, I checked the traps for spiders.
Films of water formed inside the channels of the plastic traps |
Much to my surprise, the plastic stack traps were almost entirely devoid of spiders. The reason, it seemed, was that a film of water was blocking the bottom end of many of the corrugated channels. This was true even though no rain had fallen in over two days. Water droplets also adhered to the inner walls of many channels. I had considered the propensity of cardboard to absorb water to be a potential problem here in rainy Seattle, but it appears to actually be a positive attribute of the material in so far as it prevents water droplets and films from forming. I will re-test the corrugated plastic traps again this summer, during the dry season. However, they are clearly unsuitable for use during wet weather.
The cardboard stacks again performed well; each contained at least one O. praticola. In contrast, only six of the ten cardboard rolls contained any O. praticola. There was no correlation between the orientation of the corrugated channels and the presence of O. praticola within.
Even though the roll traps didn't perform as well as the stacks, they may be the best trap to use in summer because they will be much easier to extract spiders from. The layers of the single-face cardboard I use to make roll traps are easily separated regardless of whether they are wet or dry. But the layers of the double-face cardboard used to make stack traps only separate cleanly when the cardboard is damp. Summers in western Washington are dry, not damp.
Although the traps had only been in the field for 11 days, gastropods had started to seriously degrade the outermost layer of some of the roll traps. The problem wasn't as serious with the stack traps because they were made with thicker face paper. In future, I'll put a band of box tape around the entire circumference of each roll trap to help protect it from grazing slugs and snails.
The cardboard stacks again performed well; each contained at least one O. praticola. In contrast, only six of the ten cardboard rolls contained any O. praticola. There was no correlation between the orientation of the corrugated channels and the presence of O. praticola within.
Even though the roll traps didn't perform as well as the stacks, they may be the best trap to use in summer because they will be much easier to extract spiders from. The layers of the single-face cardboard I use to make roll traps are easily separated regardless of whether they are wet or dry. But the layers of the double-face cardboard used to make stack traps only separate cleanly when the cardboard is damp. Summers in western Washington are dry, not damp.
Snails like my traps, too. |
Monday, January 8, 2018
7-Jan-2018 Spanaway, Washington
Site location map. Click to enlarge. Blue pins: Ozyptila praticola confirmed via adult specimen. Red pins: No O. praticola adults or ?praticola juveniles found. |
Walmart
Young black pines along the Walmart border |
Fallen black pine and Douglas-fir cones |
Female Wubana pacifica |
Wubana pacifica's white "butt spot" |
Light rain was falling by the time I finished sampling at this location, so I delayed my lunch break and immediately began searching for another set of cones to tap. I hoped to complete one more sample before everything got too wet.
Power Substation
White pine at power substation |
Lots of poorly-opened white pine cones |
I'm always curious to see whether I find the introduced European spider Ozyptila praticola at any given location. I didn't find any this day, or indeed in any of the other approximately two dozen sets of cones that I've tapped in Pierce County (see map above). If it's present in the county, it's highly localized.
It's that time of year... |
Wednesday, January 3, 2018
7-Dec-2017 Mowich Road, Washington
Site location map. Click to enlarge |
Loose bark on fallen tree... |
...harbored male Coriarachne brunneipes, among others |
Cone source was a dead tree |
All cones were well opened |
You can read Rod's trip narrative here.
Oh no, snow! |
Monday, January 1, 2018
Catching Ozyptila praticola In Non-lethal Cardboard Traps
3" x 3" flute B corrugated cardboard stack spider trap in Mahonia sp. |
I abandoned my pitfall plan after a few months, however, for two reasons. First, when I placed control pitfall traps in an area I knew to be rife with O. praticola, I didn't catch any. This was despite the fact that I'd placed the traps in April and May, months of peak male O. praticola activity (pitfall studies in Europe capture mostly male O. praticola). Secondly, I was getting a troubling amount of bycatch. Even as my pitfall traps failed to capture my target species, they did capture and kill amphibians, bumblebees, slugs and snails. I found this destruction of non-target species to be unethical and unacceptable.
5" x 5" flute B corrugated cardboard stack spider trap in Acer macrophyllum |
Single-face flute A (left) & double-face flute B (right) cardboard used in traps |
My plan was to do the following in my O. praticola control plot in Seattle:
- Wrap a band of flute A cardboard around the trunks of ten trees, with the corrugated side facing the tree. Place the band 2 ft off the ground on five trees, and 5 ft off the ground on another five.
- Place one six-layer stack of 3" x 3" flute B squares in the crotch of each of five shrubs. The bottom of the stack should be close to the top surface of the litter layer.
- Place one six-layer stack of 5" x 5" flute B squares in the lowest crotch of each of five trees.
3" single-face flute A corrugated cardboard band spider trap on Acer saccharum |
On 8-Oct I checked all bands and stacks for inhabitants. Most contained spiders, but none were O. praticola. I didn't check the traps again until the end of December (half on the 20th and the rest on the 30th), and by then both types of traps contained O. praticola. Raccoons had destroyed 5 tree trunk bands, but of the 5 remaining, one contained no O. praticola and the four that did contained a total of 6 females, 0 males, and 20 juveniles.
Close-up of a 3" single-face flute A corrugated cardboard band spider trap |
Of the 5" x 5" stacks in tree crotches, one had been removed and thrown to the ground by a raccoon, and contained no O. praticola. Of the four stacks remaining in place, only two contained adult O. praticola. In total, the four surviving stacks contained 3 female, 0 male, and 16 juvenile O. praticola.
This female Ozyptila praticola had been wintering inside a corrugated cardboard band on a tree trunk |
A note on removing spiders from cardboard traps: On 8-Oct, the traps were still fairly dry and so I could prod spiders out of the corrugated channels with a fine wire. However, by December the traps were wet from seasonal rain. This made the wire useless as a prod, since it got stuck in the softened channel walls. Therefore, the only way to remove the spiders was to completely destroy the traps by pulling apart the layers of the cardboard and shaking them into a sweep net. When planning different sampling methods, it could be worth bearing in mind that cardboard traps can be collected and processed even on rainy days. This can't always be said for litter sifting or other methods of collection.
Other spiders common in this set of cardboard traps included juvenile Cheiracanthium sp. and female Clubiona pallidula (both introduced species), female and male Tachygyna ursina and T. vancouverana, juvenile Philodromus sp., juvenile Phrurotimpus sp., and female Pelegrina aeneola and Phanias albeolus.
I still have a lot of work to do to determine which type of trap works best when, and how to raccoon-proof tree bands, but at least this pilot study serves as proof of concept.
*Simon Leather wrote an interesting and entertaining history of the pitfall trap, which can be found here.
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