Spiders in Borneo – Jumping Spiders in the Forest

We know that the familiar big animals like lions or polar bears specialize on large terrains of habitat like African savannahs or Arctic ice, but perhaps most people don’t realize that smaller creatures specialize at a much smaller scale. To a small spider, a tree trunk is a vast expanse of habitat. There are species of jumping spider that live only on tree trunks, while others live only on the leaves of bushes and trees.

This means that to find a diversity of spider species, you have to think at their scale. If you’ve already collected on tree trunks with rough bark, try the smooth trunks covered with moss — maybe a different species lives there. What about those epiphytic plants growing on the tree branches? They are big enough to hold tiny spiders. Vertical surfaces, horizontal surfaces; moist, dry; decomposing, fresh — each small piece of a forest can provide different living conditions that might just suit a different species. A forest is hundreds of habitats for spiders.

 

SpiderHundreds

Hundreds of different habitats.

Originally published at Scientific American, Wayne Maddison’s Spiders in Borneo Series