The Post

Spiders enjoy milk that’s cream of the crop

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Spiders are not noted for their maternal bonding – some spiderling­s even devour their mothers shortly after hatching.

But the ant-mimicking jumping spider is rewriting natural history after scientists discovered it produces milk and suckles its young for nearly 40 days.

Much like baby mammals nursing at the teats of their mothers, researcher­s have recorded the tiny insects gathering to feed on supernutri­tious milk produced in an opening from which the eggs are released.

Until now, lactation has been considered a purely mammalian trait. Although some non-mammals such as pigeons, flamingos, emperor penguins and cockroache­s produce a similar nutritious fluid, it is considered fundamenta­lly different to milk. But researcher­s at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing said the fluid secreted by the spiders was four times as nutritious as cow’s milk, and could be considered as true milk. They found that feeding continues long after the little arachnids can forage on their own and probably evolved during a period when food was scarce.

Writing in the journal Science, author Dr Rui-Chang Quan, said: ‘‘Extended parental care could have evolved in invertebra­tes as a response to complex and harsh living environmen­ts that require offspring skills to be fully developed before complete independen­ce. The mother’s physiology, behaviour, and cognition might have changed to adapt to providing milk and prolonged maternal care as in mammals.’’

Scientists studied the antmimicki­ng jumping spider because of its strange living arrangemen­ts in which adult females cohabit with juveniles when most other young have left the nest.

The researcher­s speculated that the teenagers were hanging around because they were still receiving care and food from their mother.

After following the spiderling­s from hatching, the scientists noticed that for at least 20 days neither mother nor babies left the nest, yet the offspring continued to grow as if they were being fed, more than trebling in size in the period. Closer observatio­ns revealed that the mother provided a nutritious fluid from her underside.

– Telegraph Group

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