What makes a spider spin a web?
CrowdScience
BBC
4.8 • 1K Ratings
🗓️ 23 April 2020
⏱️ 27 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
If you have ever watched a spider as it works to build a web, spiralling inwards with a thread of silk, that intersects each glistening spoke with a precise touch of the foot, you will know that it is a remarkably complex behaviour. In this episode, presenter Geoff Marsh dives into the minds of spider-constructors as they build their webs. CrowdScience listener Daan asked us to find out how spiders can build webs without ever being taught how to do it. Are they just little robots controlled entirely by their genetic instructions? Spider silk expert Dr Beth Mortimer, describes the process of building a web in detail, while Professor Iain Couzin explains the simple modular behaviours that build up, in sequence, to create apparently complex instincts, like the huge locust swarms that are sweeping across vast areas of Africa and Arabia.
Taking us deep under the exoskeletons of invertebrates, Professor Gene Robinson reveals an animal's behaviours can be altered by their genes, and the root similarity between learning and instincts. Spiders, despite their tiny size, have fascinating behaviours. Some jumping spiders can work out the best way out of a maze, and one arachnologist reveals how some social spiders can cooperate to build communal webs and capture moths that are many times their size. Geoff searches for the science that can reveal how instinct can create complex behaviour by setting up interviews at the homes of spider experts from around the world. Presented by Geoff Marsh. Produced by Rory Galloway for BBC World Service.
Image: European garden spider, Araneus diadematus hanging in the web. Photo by: Michael Siluk / Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Take some time for yourself with soothing classical music from the mindful mix, the Science of |
| 0:07.0 | Happiness Podcast. |
| 0:08.0 | For the last 20 years I've dedicated my career to exploring the science of living a happier more meaningful life and I want |
| 0:14.4 | to share that science with you. |
| 0:16.1 | And just one thing, deep calm with Michael Mosley. |
| 0:19.4 | I want to help you tap in to your hidden relaxation response system and open the door to that |
| 0:25.4 | calmer place within. Listen on BBC Sounds. |
| 0:30.3 | Hello and |
| 0:33.7 | welcome to Crowds Science from the BBC World Service. |
| 0:36.1 | I'm Jeff Marsh and currently right in front of me glistening in the evening's |
| 0:40.3 | sun is a structure that's always fascinated me, a spider web. What amazes me is how every |
| 0:46.4 | time I see these structures freshly made, they're always perfect, like there's a blueprint. |
| 0:51.6 | Well, there sort of is. Here's Beth Mortimer. |
| 0:55.0 | The first thing that an orb weaving spider needs to be able to do is to have basically one thread |
| 1:06.4 | that is going across space. They'll go to the middle, attach another silk fiber and |
| 1:12.0 | pull it all down into a y shape. They can then build structural |
| 1:16.5 | threads. This is essentially the outer rim of a web. After this, they lay silk going into the |
| 1:21.7 | center. Basically the spokes of the orb web. |
| 1:24.0 | These threads are all sturdy structural dry spokes |
| 1:28.0 | but then comes the sticky stuff |
| 1:30.0 | or as it's more technically known, the capture spiral. |
| 1:33.0 | They'll then spend the majority of their web building time then slowly laying down this capture spiral. |
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