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Egg sac construction by folding dead leaves in Pozonia nigroventris and Micrathena sp. (Araneae: Araneidae)

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Moya Ramírez, Jairo
Quesada Hidalgo, Rosannette
Barrantes Montero, Gilbert
Eberhard Chabtree, William G.
Escalante Meza, Ignacio
Esquivel Dobles, Carolina
Rojas, Andrés
Triana Cambronero, Emilia
Arias, Adriana

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Published descriptions of egg sac construction behavior in araneids are scarce. We describe egg sac construction and oviposition in one individual of the poorly known araneid Pozonia nigroventris (Bryant 1936) and two individuals of Micrathena sp. These spiders folded dead leaves to protect their eggs. All individuals pulled up and hung a dead leaf above the forest floor, oviposited on the leaf, and then folded the leaf around the egg sac. They then deposited the enclosed egg sac in the leaf litter below. The use of dead leaves in this way probably evolved convergently, since these genera are only distantly related.

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Canopy spider, convergent behavior, oviposition, predator defense

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