Skip to main content

Secondary menu

User menu

  • Join
  • OR
  • Log In

MNN - Mother Nature Network

Friday, May 24, 2013
SPECIAL FEATURES:
  • Leaderboard
  • Nest
  • TreeHugger
  • Photos
  • Blogs
  • SB 2013
  • Joy of Less

Search form

Social links

Main menu

  • Earth Matters
    • Browse all »
    • Animals
    • Weather
    • Energy
    • Politics
    • Space
    • Translating Uncle Sam
    • Wilderness & Resources
  • Health
    • Browse all »
    • Allergies
    • Fitness & Well-Being
    • Healthy Spaces
  • Lifestyle
    • Browse all »
    • Arts & Culture
    • Travel
    • Natural Beauty & Fashion
    • Recycling
    • Responsible Living
  • Green Tech
    • Browse all »
    • Computers
    • Gadgets & Electronics
    • Research & Innovations
    • Transportation
  • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Browse all »
    • Green Workplace
    • Personal Finance
    • Sustainable Business Practices
  • Food & Drink
    • Browse all »
    • Beverages
    • Healthy Eating
    • Recipes
  • Your Home
    • Browse all »
    • At Home
    • Organic Farming & Gardening
    • Remodeling & Design
  • Family
    • Browse all »
    • Babies & Pregnancy
    • Family Activities
    • Pets
    • Protection & Safety

Breadcrumb Navigation

MNN.COM › Green Tech › Research & Innovations
    x
  • Tweet
  • Email
  • Bookmark and ShareShare
  • Earn Points
    What's this?
Spider silk may act as pest repellant
Researchers suspected that insects and other spiders prey might associate silk with the risk of getting eaten.

By

Charles Choi, LiveScience Contributor
Thu, Nov 29 2012 at 6:18 PM

Related Topics:

Research & Innovation, Science
spider web

Both spider and silkworm silk reduced insect plant-chewing significantly. In the lab, both eliminated insect damage entirely, while in the field, spider silk had a greater effect. (Photo: Hellen Grig/Shutterstock)

Spider silk can be scary enough to insects to act as a pest repellant, researchers say.
 
These findings could lead to a new way to naturally help protect crops, scientists added.
 
Spiders are among the most common predators on land. Although not all spiders weave webs, they all spin silk that may serve other purposes. For instance, many tiny spiders use silk balloons to travel by air.
 
Researchers suspected that insects and other regular prey of spiders might associate silk with the risk of getting eaten. As such, they reasoned silk might scare insects off.
 
The scientists experimented with Japanese beetles (Popillia japonica) and Mexican bean beetles (Epilachna varivestis). These plant-munching pests have spread across eastern North America within the past half-century. [Ewww! Nature's Biggest Pests]
 
The beetles were analyzed near green bean plants (Phaseolus vulgaris) in both the lab and a tilled field outdoors. The investigators applied two kinds of silk on the plants — one from silkworms (Bombyx mori) and another from a long-jawed spider (Tetragnatha elongata), a species common in riverbank forests but not in the region the researchers studied.
 
Both spider and silkworm silk reduced insect plant-chewing significantly. In the lab, both eliminated insect damage entirely, while in the field, spider silk had a greater effect — plants enclosed with beetles and spider silk experienced about 50 percent less damage than leaves without spider silk, while silkworm silk only led to about a 10 to 20 percent reduction. Experiments with other fibers revealed that only silk had this protective effect.
 
"This work suggests that silk alone is a signal to potential prey that danger is near," researcher Ann Rypstra, an evolutionary ecologist at Miami University in Hamilton, Ohio, told LiveScience.
 
Rypstra was most surprised that the effect occurred even though the species involved do not share any evolutionary history together as predator and prey. This suggests "herbivores are using the silk as some sort of general signal that a spider — any ol' spider — is around and responding by reducing their activity or leaving the area," she said.
 
While more work will need to be done before this research might find applied use, the fact that the presence of silk alone reduced damage caused by two economically important pest insects "suggests that there could be applications in agricultural pest management and biological control," Rypstra said.
 
Rypstra is also interested in the chain reaction of events that silk might trigger in an ecosystem.
 
"For example, if an herbivore encounters a strand of silk and alters its behavior in a particular manner, does that make it more susceptible to predation by a non-spider?" Rypstra asked. "Do spiders that leave lots of silk behind have a larger impact in the food web, and how does it vary from habitat to habitat? These are just a couple of questions that we might be exploring in the near future."
 
Rypstra and her colleagues detailed their findings online Nov. 28 in the journal Biology Letters.
 
Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on LiveScience and MNN:
 
  • Gallery: Spooky Spiders
  • What Really Scares People: Top 10 Phobias
  • Gallery: Dazzling Photos of Dew-Covered Insects
  • MNN: Spiders in Pakistan encase whole trees in webs
 
This story was originally written for Space.com and is republished with permission here. Copyright 2012 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company.

You might also like:

Join the conversation

Sign in with one of these accounts to add your comment.
Log in or
create an account
  • Sign in using this account:

EDITORS' PICKS

tease weird things

line

tease cellars

line

tease fishing

Advertisement

TODAY'S MOST POPULAR ON

  1. Student science experiment finds plants won't grow near Wi-Fi router
  2. How to get a second crop of tomatoes -- for free
  3. 10 cats made famous by YouTube
  4. 7 places where you can get a free online education
  5. 9 habits that may do more harm than good
  6. Archaeologists unearth 5,000-year-old 'third-gender' caveman
  7. 10 false facts most people think are true
  8. 13 natural remedies for the ant invasion
  9. Bras don't actually work, says French study
  10. Is there a risk in becoming a 'bagel head'?
+ Add this to my site
From our sponsor
Civic Accelerator: A Platform for Social Entrepreneurship
A competition between 10 finalists, the program offers seed money for enterprises that inspire, more...
Reinventing the meeting
AltruHelp addresses 5 reasons millennials don't volunteer
The online social platform aims to boost flagging volunteer rates among this generation by making more...
Reinventing the meeting
BOULD housing project creates green ‘learning laboratories’
A Denver-based civic venture constructs high-quality green housing for low-income families while more...
Reinventing the meeting
Students use CareerVillage to get advice from real professionals
Young people from low-income communities submit career questions via the website and get answers more...
Reinventing the meeting
Generation Citizen strengthens democracy by empowering youth
Program partners college students with high schools to challenge the younger students to find more...
Reinventing the meeting

Follow us:

NEWSLETTER

Mother Nature. Delivered
Advertisement
Advertisement

Footer menu

  • Quick Links
    • Joy of Less
    • About Us
    • Advisory Board
    • Editors' Blog
    • Press
    • Privacy
    • Sitemap
    • Terms of Service
  • MNN Tools
    • Advice
    • Blogs
    • Day in History
    • Eco-glossary
    • Infographics
    • Lists
    • Photos
    • Videos
  • Connect
    • The Nest
    • Contact Us
    • Mixed Greens
    • Newsletters
    • RSS
    • Social
    • TreeHugger
    • Mobile
  • Channels
    • Earth Matters
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Green Tech
    • Eco-Biz & Money
    • Your Home
    • Family
    • State Reports
  • Follow MNN
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Google+
    • StumbleUpon

Copyright © 2013 MNN Holdings, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Website by GLICK INTERACTIVE | Powered by CIRRACORE

SPONSORS