Researchers at Division of Arachnology record the sighting of a huntsman and jumping spider in Western Ghats.

Researchers at the Division of Arachnology in Sacred Heart College here have recorded the sighting of a huntsman and jumping spider in the Western Ghats.

The spiders belong to the Sparassidae and Salticidae families. The research team included Dr. Mathew M.J., Fr. Jobi Malamel and Pradeep Kumar M.S. and were led by Dr. P.A. Sebastian, director of the Division of Arachnology.

The huntsman spider was sighted at Ponmudi, while the researchers found the jumping spider at the Malayattoor and Bhoothathankettu reserve forest near here.

“Huntsman spiders are known for their speed and mode of hunting. Sometimes they hide in the ambush and surprise the prey. Some of these spiders have been found making a substrate-borne sound deliberately when they detect a chemical left by a nearby female of their species,” said the researchers.

They said that the males anchor themselves firmly to the surface to which they have crawled and use their legs to transmit vibrations from their bodies to the surface. The characteristic frequency of vibration and the pattern of bursts of sound alert the females, who will approach if they are interested in mating, they said.

Dr. Sebastian said that jumping spiders prey like a grasshopper, as it jumps from one place to another.

It has been given the name Stenaelurillus albus owing to the presence of a unique whitish area on the copulatory organ of the male spider. The discovery is unique as it has the presence of mating plugs that have been reported in only 17 species of the approximate 5,800 jumping spiders recorded till now, he said.