MESSAGE
DATE | 2006-06-23 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Subject: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] The original Web
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ldest Known Spiderweb Found in Ancient Amber Charles Petit for National Geographic News June 22, 2006
The oldest known fragment of spiderweb has been found entombed in a piece of 110-million-year-old Spanish amber, scientists announced today.
The fossil web was found complete with several entangled insects and other small creatures.
Its discovery seems to cement arguments that spiders living in the age of dinosaurs already wove complex aerial webs like those snagging bees and butterflies today.
Experts believe the earliest spiders probably made silk to line burrows or to help pick up vibrations from prey crawling past them.
But no one is sure exactly when so-called orb weaving spiders evolved and began suspending their iconic spiral webs in the air (see a spiderweb photo gallery).
"When you look at the piece, the striking thing is that the geometry of the web and the prey type and size in it are like what one would see today," said David Grimaldi, an invertebrate biology specialist at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
"Spiders have been fishing insects from the air for a very long time."
Grimaldi and colleague Enrique Peñalver, along with Xavier Delclòs; of the University of Barcelona in Spain, will publish their findings in tomorrow's issue of the journal Science.
A separate study by a team based at the University of California, Riverside, which also appears in this week's Science, analyzed genetic diversity within two groups of living orb-weaving spiders.
That study concludes that orb-weavers probably first appeared around 136 million years ago, a date that reinforces the amber evidence.
Fossil Gem
Spiders and many other small creatures are often found trapped in ancient amber. The hard, yellowish material is a fossil form of the sticky sap that oozes from trees such as pines and other conifers.
Amber is considered a gem, and pieces containing intact insects are among those that jewelry makers prize the most.
The newfound amber piece is roughly cylindrical and measures about 0.7 by 0.3 of an inch (18 by 7.5 millimeters).
It comes from fossil-rich amber deposits discovered in the Aragon region of northeastern Spain about seven years ago (map of Spain).
According to the authors, the new find is not only the oldest but also the first known substantial fossilized section of spider web.
The partial web includes 26 strands of silk, some of them joined by cross links, Grimaldi says, which are typical of orb-weaving spider webs.
The only sample comparable to the find is a piece of Lebanese amber 130 million years old that holds a single strand of spider silk (read "Dinosaur-Era Spiderweb Found in Amber").
Both specimens formed during the early Cretaceous period, a time when creatures such as iguanadons were on the scene but well before the arrival of Tyrannosaurus rex.
While there was no spider present in the latest find, the amber did contain a mite, a beetle, a leg from a wasp, and a fly caught by the spider's silk.
The discovery, Grimaldi says, helps researchers understand the evolution of both spiders and their prey.
For example, a long history of hanging webs would mean spiders have been influencing the evolution of flying insects for millions of years.
Tangled Web
Jonathan Coddington is a spider expert with the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., who was not involved with the study.
He agrees that even without a spider present, there is little doubt that the webbing is spider silk, because of the tiny, characteristic beads of glue spaced out along several of the strands.
"There is just nothing else that could do it," he said.
The paper's authors propose that the webbing in the amber is from a single section caught by the sap as it dripped slowly from a tree branch.
Coddington disagrees with that detail.
"A glob like that is probably not going to get a whole section with that much prey at once," he said.
Instead he imagines that the web was suspended close alongside a hanging glob of sap. As wind occasionally slapped the web against the resin, the web would lose a chunk along with its trapped prey.
But Coddington supports the paper's basic point about the time frame for the origins of orb weaving.
Another fossil and amber expert, George O. Poinar, Jr., of Oregon State University in Corvallis, is more doubtful.
He says the new report is interesting, but that many authorities "just assume spiders have made webs since [the animals] first appeared" more than 400 million years ago.
Still, he says, amber such as this latest discovery does preserve vital information on spider evolution. By one count, 500 extinct spider species have been found in amber from Europe's Baltic region alone.
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