Mask of wax: Secretions of wax conceal aphids from detection by spider's eyes

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Abstract

We investigated how insects use wax as a defence against visual predators, using a New Zealand salticid species, Marpissa marina, as the predator and Eriosoma lanigerum, an aphid that covers itself with wax, as the prey. For live‐prey testing, the predator was presented with two aphids, one with its wax covering intact and one with its wax removed. The predator ate more of the waxless than wax‐covered aphids. The predators were presented with two lures at a time: (1) one that was fully covered with wax (hid the aphid's head) compared with one that was without wax (waxless) or (2) one that was fully covered with wax compared with one that was only partially covered with wax (the head of the prey exposed), or (3) one that was waxless compared with one that was partially covered with wax. The predators stalked waxless prey more often than they stalked prey that was fully or partially covered with wax. When wax only partially covered the prey (i.e., when the prey's head was left exposed), the predator more often stalked than when the insect was fully covered. These findings suggest that the aphid's wax covering functions in part to hide prey‐identification cues from vision‐guided predators. © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2006.

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Jackson, R. R., Moss, R., & Pollard, S. D. (2006). Mask of wax: Secretions of wax conceal aphids from detection by spider’s eyes. New Zealand Journal of Zoology, 33(3), 215–220. https://doi.org/10.1080/03014223.2006.9518448

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