Abstract
Determining factors that facilitate the transition from a solitary to a social lifestyle is a major challenge in evolutionary biology, especially in taxa that are usually aggressive towards conspecifics. Most spiders live solitarily and few species are known to be social. Nevertheless, sociality has evolved multiple times across several families and nearly all studied social lineages have originated from a periodically social (subsocial) ancestor. Group-living crab spiders (Thomisidae) are exclusively found in Australia and differ from most other social spiders because they lack a communal capture web. Three of the group-living species were placed in the genus Diaea and another in the genus Xysticus. Most Australian thomisids are, however, difficult to identify as most descriptions are old and of poor quality, and the genera Diaea and Xysticus may not correspond to monophyletic groups. Here, we clarify the phylogenetic relationships of the four group-living Australian thomisids and conclude that amongst these subsociality has evolved two to three times independently. The subsocial Xysticus bimaculatus is not closely related to any of the social Diaea and an independent origin of subsociality is likely in this case. The presented data indicates that within Diaea two origins of subsociality are possible. Our results help to understand the evolution of sociality in thomisids and support the hypothesis that permanent sociality in spiders has evolved multiple times relatively recently from subsocial ancestors.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 330-340 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution |
| Volume | 82 |
| Issue number | PA |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2015 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information: We would like to thank Robert Whyte for helping and providing equipment during the fieldtrips to Brisbane. Moreover, we are grateful to our fieldwork assistants who helped collecting the spiders (Marie E. Herberstein and Melanie Gralow in Brisbane, Catherine Lacey in Western Australia and Stefanie Kaiser in Northern NSW). We thank Felipe Gawryszewski for donating spiders that he collected in 2008. Furthermore, we thank Liette Vandine for assistance in the laboratory. JR was funded by an international scholarship of Macquarie University. Additional funding came from an UVM start-up funds to IA. Publisher Copyright: © 2014 Elsevier Inc.Other keywords
- Araneae
- Diaea
- Social evolution
- Social spider
- Thomisid phylogeny