Arachnids of North Carolina
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Scientific Name: Common Name: Family (Alpha):
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Mastophora stowei - No Common Name     Araneidae Members: NC Records BugGuide Account Public View
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Distribution Records
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Vetting Levels
Adult phenology:
 High Mountains (HM) ≥ 4,000 ft.
 Low Mountains (LM) < 4,000 ft.
 Piedmont (Pd)
 Coastal Plain (CP)

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synonym
taxonomic_comments Common name refers to this genus' practice of snaring prey in mid-flight by swinging a silk line with an adhesive blob on the end, similar to the bolas used by Argentinian gauchos.
species_comment
id_comments
total_length Small to medium sized, females up to 17mm, males up to 2 mm.
structural_features
silk_web Bolas spiders' minimal web is explained by the fact that they have evolved the ability to mimic moth pheromones. Male moths approach from downwind. When the moth is close enough, the spider flings a coiled ball of gluey silk to entangle its prey. The spider pulls in its line and bites the prey. Both tiny males and immature females hunt without the aid of a bolas. They use a different odor lure to attract male psychodid flies by hunting at the edge of leaves. The sticky bolas ball dries quickly, so adult spiders consume the bolas after at most half an hour if the hunt was fruitless.
fld_guide_descriptions
online_photos
prey Flying insects; certain species specialize on particular species of moths, to the point of releasing mimics of their pheromones in order to attract prey (virtually all male moths) within capture range.
predators Five species of hymenopteran parasitoids are known to attack Mastophora eggs.
behavior When egg sacs hatch they release immature females and *mature* males! Presumably an adaptation to avoid inbreeding. Males are short-lived and much smaller (obviously) than females. When disturbed they give off an odor that is detectable at close range.
distribution_reference
technical_reference Spiders of North America - Bradley; Spiders of the Carolinas – Gaddy; Bugguide
adult_id 1 identifiable by photo 2 identifiable by photo of specific features and/or supplementary info 3 identifiable from specimen only
abundance Known from one specimen record from Haywood county. Bolas spiders mate in late summer. In late fall, the female spider attaches several egg-sacs suspended in the vicinity of her retreat; each one is larger than herself and contains a few hundred eggs. Males emerge as re-productively capable adults.
distribution_comments According to bugguide, uncommon but widespread in the eastern United States
checklist_mt_high
>=4,000 ft.
Regular
Frequent
Infrequent
Occasional
Seldom
Frequency
checklist_mt_low
<4,000 ft.
Regular
Frequent
Infrequent
Occasional
Seldom
checklist_pd
Piedmont
Regular
Frequent
Infrequent
Occasional
Seldom
checklist_cp
Coastal Plain
Regular
Frequent
Infrequent
Occasional
Seldom
habitat
observation_methods Visual observation.
state_protection
NHP_ranks
NHP_status
status_comments