Spider nest-retreat origin, diversification, and architectural
plasticity link to historical and current temperature fluctuations
Abstract
Ongoing climate change mandates improved understanding of how
temperature fluctuations influence organismal evolution and behavior.
Detritus-based nest-retreats in spiders have originated multiple times
in parallel—hypothesized to be an adaptive response to climatic
fluctuations. We investigated the potential role of climate change in
shaping the evolution of nest-retreats over geological timescales, and
the short-term effect of temperature on the morphology and energy
investment of nest-retreat in Campanicola campanulata.
Phylogenetic analyses reconstruct twelve origins of nest-retreats, first
appearing in the Eocene, and diversifying during the Late Cenozoic
Icehouse period. Spiders respond to experimentally lowered temperatures
by making larger nest-retreats, indicating a direct impact of
temperature on retreat architecture. Our results for the first time
affirm the thermoregulatory function of spider nests and suggest that
temperature impacts nest-retreats across both evolutionary and
ecological timescales. Nest-retreat spiders can serve as a model to
study the origins of thermoregulatory nest-building in animals and how
it may be impacted by ongoing climate change.