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Group 1

<html><font size=6 face=“Arial”>Spider-hunting wasps</font></html>

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Introduction

Under a bridge in north central Florida leaves a population of mud dauber wasps. These wasps are voracious predators with an extremely interesting hunting mode. Female wasps are specialized in capturing and paralyzing spider preys only to store them in mud nests as a way to keep them save (and zombie-like alive) to later be devoured by the wasp larvae. Interestingly enough, not all mother wasps have the same preferences for which type of spider they like to offer their offspring, a pattern known as individual specialisation. In the same population there are specialist wasps, that hunt only species from the a single genus; and generalist wasps, that hunt spiders from as much as 7 genera.

Specialist individuals might be more efficient in capturing and handling prey, nevertheless, if competition for that resource is high and/or the density of that resource is reduced, such specialists could reach a dead end and starve. Generalist individuals might have a lower foraging efficiency (as they put be skilled enough to hunt and capture multiple prey items), but in high levels of competition (or unpredictable availability of resources) it could be beneficial to be a jack of all trades instead and a master of none.

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Assignment

Propose a model to explore hunting strategies in mud dauber wasps and the effect of competition on coexistence of strategies

Questions & Suggestions

(1) Explore how the degree of intraspecific competition influences the prevalence (and coexistence) of specialist and generalist hunting modes. (2) How does resource availability influences coexistence of strategies? How does degree availability affects which strategy is more likely to be prevalent? (3) Does competition between spider species influences diversity of predator strategies? (4) Would both strategies (specialist and generalist) provide a similar fitness to the offspring, as suggested by the authors? Explore scenarios where larvae fed by mothers choosing different strategies differ in fitness.

Challenge

Interestingly, the authors found a generalist female with exceptional hunting abilities. The most generalist female was able to hunt spiders from as much as XX different genus, encompassing spider species with a highly diverse hunting modes, and webs. Was she the female-spider version of John Wick or perhaps, as suggested, was she stealing prey from other females (a hunting strategy known as kleptoparasitism)? In such case, explore kleptoparasitism as an additional foraging strategy. In which situation (in terms of degree of competition, prey availability, and proportion of population using each alternative strategies) would that kleptoparasitism most likely prevail?

References

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