Britain’s rarest spider moves house in a plastic bottle
18/08/2011 15:05:37
EXTREMELY RARE: Ladybird spiders had been thought to be extinct in the UK
Ladybird spider had been on brink of extinction
August 2011: The UK's rarest spider will get a boost as it is given a new home in one of the country's top bug hotspots.
The ladybird spider - so called for its bright red body covered in black spots - was on the brink of extinction in the mid 1990s when a single colony of just 56 individuals was left in the UK. Since then conservationists have been helping it to spread further afield - and earlier this month it waas released into one of the most diverse insect and spider habitats in the country at the RSPB's Arne reserve in Dorset.
And scientists have come up with an ingenious low-tech method of transferring the spiders. They are using empty plastic mineral water bottles - which are an ideal shape and size for the spiders to make their nests in.
Bottles are buried in holes
The bottles were filled with heather and moss and captured spiders from the donor site were placed inside and monitored while they settled in and made a web. The bottles were then buried in holes in the ground at Arne so that the spiders can colonise the nearby area.
The spiders will be another piece of the invertebrate jigsaw for the Arne reserve which is already home to a host of rare insect and spider species. The heathland site boasts 240 species of spider and hundreds of insect species including the threatened silver studded blue butterfly and the Roesel's bush cricket which was discovered on the site last year.
Toby Branston, RSPB Arne warden, said: ‘Arne is an amazing place for bugs and this is the best time of year to see and hear them. To be introducing such a rare new species here is very exciting, and I hope we can help it to spread further.
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NEW HOME: A ladybird spider in a plastic bottle ready for translocation |
Spend most of their time underground
‘The most striking thing about the ladybird spider is the unique colourful markings on the male which give it its name, but it also leads a fascinating lifestyle. They spend most of their time underground where they create silk canopies which they decorate with the remains of beetles, ants and other spiders they have eaten.
‘Burying plastic bottles in the heathland may seem a little strange to some of our visitors, but the experts have found that this is the best way to translocate the spiders. This is an ideal habitat for them so we will be keeping a close eye on the new colony and carrying out regular surveys to see if they take to their new home.'
For many years scientists believed that ladybird spiders were extinct from the UK but a colony was discovered clinging on in the 1980s. It is a heathland specialist and has suffered over the years from the destruction of much of our wildlife rich heathland habitat. More than 90 per cent of our lowland heathland has been lost to agriculture, commercial forestry and development, putting major pressure on the species that rely on it.
As well as insects and spiders, heathland is also home to endangered reptiles such as smooth snakes and sand lizards, and birds such as the Dartford warbler and the nightjar.
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