European nursery web spider (Pisaura mirabilis)

Here’s a detailed natural history overview of the European nursery web spider (Pisaura mirabilis), a well-known and widespread hunting spider in Europe:


European Nursery Web Spider (Pisaura mirabilis)

Taxonomy & Classification

  • Kingdom: Animalia
  • Phylum: Arthropoda
  • Class: Arachnida
  • Order: Araneae
  • Family: Pisauridae (nursery web spiders)
  • Genus: Pisaura
  • Species: P. mirabilis

General Description

A medium-sized, long-legged hunting spider famous for its unique courtship behavior and maternal care.

  • Body length: 10–15 mm (males), 12–18 mm (females).
  • Coloration:
    • Generally brown to grey with a pale stripe running down the carapace.
    • Patterning variable, providing camouflage in vegetation and leaf litter.
  • Legs: Long, slender, and spiny; adapted for fast running rather than web building.
  • Eyes: Eight arranged in two rows, giving good vision.
  • Sexual Dimorphism: Females larger and bulkier; males slimmer.
See also  Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea)

Behavior & Lifestyle

  • Hunting:
    • Active hunter; does not build a capture web.
    • Stalks and ambushes prey such as flies, moths, and other small insects.
    • Immobilizes prey with venom and silk.
  • Courtship:
    • Males present females with a nuptial gift (a silk-wrapped insect).
    • While the female examines the gift, the male attempts mating.
    • This reduces the chance of male cannibalism.
  • Reproduction & Maternal Care:
    • Female carries her egg sac attached to her chelicerae (mouthparts).
    • When spiderlings are about to hatch, she builds a silken nursery web among vegetation.
    • Guards the nursery until spiderlings disperse.
  • Activity: Most visible in spring and summer, often basking in sunny spots on grass or low shrubs.

Habitat

  • Prefers grasslands, meadows, hedgerows, forest edges, and gardens.
  • Likes sunny, open habitats with tall vegetation for hunting and nursery web construction.
See also  Green lacewing

Geographic Range

  • Widespread and common throughout Europe, from the British Isles across central and northern Europe.
  • Absent from some of the most northern and arid southern regions.

Ecological Role

  • Predator: Controls populations of flying insects and small arthropods.
  • Prey: Consumed by birds, larger spiders, and wasps.
  • Plays a role in balancing insect populations in grassland ecosystems.

Special Adaptations

  • Nuptial Gift Strategy: Increases mating success and male survival.
  • Maternal Care: Rare among spiders, providing added survival to offspring.
  • Camouflage: Brown mottled coloration blends perfectly with grasses and leaves.

Conservation Status

  • IUCN Red List: Not assessed, but considered common and widespread.
  • Threats:
    • Intensive agriculture and pesticide use.
    • Habitat loss of flower-rich grasslands.
  • Still stable in much of Europe due to its adaptability.

Interesting Facts

  • Sometimes females steal nuptial gifts from one another, or males may attempt “cheating” by offering worthless gifts wrapped in silk.
  • Can be seen sunbathing with legs stretched forward, giving it a distinctive posture.
  • One of the few spiders in Europe that regularly carries its egg sac in the jaws rather than attached to the abdomen.
  • The name “nursery web” comes from the protective silk tent the female constructs for her young.
See also  Eurasian Blue tit (Cyanistes caeruleus)

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