Title
High-Performance Spider Webs: Integrating Biomechanics, Ecology and Behaviour
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
Fall 2010
Abstract
Spider silks exhibit remarkable properties, surpassing most natural and synthetic materials in both strength and toughness. Orb-web spider dragline silk is the focus of intense research by material scientists attempting to mimic these naturally produced fibres. However, biomechanical research on spider silks is often removed from the context of web ecology and spider foraging behaviour. Similarly, evolutionary and ecological research on spiders rarely considers the significance of silk properties. Here, we highlight the critical need to integrate biomechanical and ecological perspectives on spider silks to generate a better understanding of (i) how silk biomechanics and web architectures interacted to influence spider web evolution along different structural pathways, and (ii) how silks function in an ecological context, which may identify novel silk applications. An integrative, mechanistic approach to understanding silk and web function, as well as the selective pressures driving their evolution, will help uncover the potential impacts of environmental change and species invasions (of both spiders and prey) on spider success. Integrating these fields will also allow us to take advantage of the remarkable properties of spider silks, expanding the range of possible silk applications from single threads to two- and three-dimensional thread networks.
Publication Title
Journal of The Royal Society Interface
Volume
8
First Page
457
Last Page
471
Recommended Citation
Blackledge, Todd; Harmer, Aaron MT; Madin, Joshua S.; and Herberstein, Marie E., "High-Performance Spider Webs: Integrating Biomechanics, Ecology and Behaviour" (2010). Biology Faculty Research. 138.
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/biology_ideas/138