Daily Mail: Meet a colorful but colorblind spider

University of Cincinnati biologists found that one jumping spider could not see its own vivid reds

The UK Daily Mail highlighted research by the University of Cincinnati and an international team of scientists looking at the vision of a colorful jumping spider.

UC College of Arts and Sciences biologist Nathan Morehouse and former UC postdoctoral researcher David Outomuro worked with researchers in Europe to examine Saitis barbipes, a jumping spider with vibrant red markings on its face and legs.

“We assumed they were using color for communication. But we didn’t know if their visual system even allowed them to see those colors,” said David Outomuro, a UC postdoctoral researcher now at the University of Pittsburgh.

Biologists collected spiders in Slovenia for lab study in Germany and used microspectrophotometry at UC to identify photoreceptors sensitive to various light wavelengths or colors. Unexpectedly, they found no evidence of a red photoreceptor. Likewise, they looked for colored filters within the eye that might shift green sensitivity to red, but found none.

Instead, they identified patches on the spider that strongly absorb ultraviolet wavelengths to appear as bright “spider green” to other jumping spiders. The red colors that are so vivid to us likely appear no different than black markings to jumping spiders.

“It’s a bit of a head-scratcher what’s going on here,” professor Morehouse said. “We haven’t solved the mystery of what the red is doing.”

The study was published in the journal The Science of Nature.

Read the UK Daily Mail story.

Featured image at top: An international team of researchers examined the color vision of the brightly colored jumping spider Saitis barbipes. Photo/Bernard Dupont/Wikimedia Commons

Nathan Morehouse,  National Science Foundation grant to study spider vision around the world. 711H Rieveschl

UC College of Arts and Sciences associate professor Nathan Morehouse worked with a team of international partners to examine the color vision of a jumping spider. Photo/Jay Yocis/UC Creative + Brand

More UC biology in the news

Related Stories

1

Ancient Maya blessed their ballcourts

April 26, 2024

Using environmental DNA analysis, researchers identified a collection of plants used in ceremonial rituals in the ancient Maya city of Yaxnohcah. The plants, known for their religious associations and medicinal properties, were discovered beneath a plaza floor upon which a ballcourt was built, suggesting the building might have been blessed or consecrated during construction.

Debug Query for this