Spider silks are among the toughest known materials and thus provide models for renewable, biodegradable, and sustainable biopolymers. However, the entirety of their diversity still remains elusive, and silks that exceed the performance limits of industrial fibers are constantly being found. We obtained transcriptome assemblies from 1098 species of spiders to comprehensively catalog silk gene sequences and measured the mechanical, thermal, structural, and hydration properties of the dragline silks of 446 species. The combination of these silk protein genotype-phenotype data revealed essential contributions of multicomponent structures with major ampullate spidroin 1 to 3 paralogs in high-performance dragline silks and numerous amino acid motifs contributing to each of the measured properties. We hope that our global sampling, comprehensive testing, integrated analysis, and open data will provide a solid starting point for future biomaterial designs.
Orb webs produced by araneoid spiders depend upon aggregate glue-coated capture threads to retain their prey. Moths are challenging prey for most spiders because their scales detach and contaminate the glue droplets, significantly decreasing adhesion. Cyrtarachne are moth-specialist orb-weaving spiders whose capture threads adhere well to moths. We compare the adhesive properties and chemistry of Cyrtarachne aggregate glue to other orb-weaving spiders to test hypotheses about their structure, chemistry and performance that could explain the strength of Cyrtarachne glue. We show that the unusually large glue droplets on Cyrtarachne capture threads make them approximately 8 times more adhesive on glass substrate than capture threads from typical orb-weaving species, but Cyrtarachne adhesion is similar to that of other species after normalization by glue volume. Glue viscosity reversibly changes over 1000-fold in response to atmospheric humidity, and the adhesive strength of many species of orb spiders is maximized at a viscosity of approximately 105–106 cst where the contributions of spreading and bulk cohesion are optimized. By contrast, viscosity of Cyrtarachne aggregate glue droplets is approximately 1000 times lower at maximum adhesive humidity, likely facilitating rapid spreading across moth scales. Water uptake by glue droplets is controlled, in part, by hygroscopic low molecular weight compounds. NMR showed evidence that Cyrtarachne glue contains a variety of unknown low molecular weight compounds. These compounds may help explain how Cyrtarachne produces such exceptionally large and low viscosity glue droplets, and also why these glue droplets rapidly lose water volume after brief ageing or exposure to even slightly dry (e.g. < 80% RH) conditions, permanently reducing their adhesion. We hypothesize that the combination of large glue droplet size and low viscosity helps Cyrtarachne glue to penetrate the gaps between moth scales.
Contaminants decrease adhesive strength by interfering with substrate contact. Spider webs adhering to moths present an ideal model to investigate how natural adhesives overcome contamination because moths' sacrificial layer of scales rubs off on sticky silk, facilitating escape. However, Cyrtarachninae spiders have evolved gluey capture threads that adhere well to moths. Cyrtarachne capture threads contain large glue droplets oversaturated with water, readily flowing but also prone to drying out. Here, we compare the spreading and adhesion of Cyrtarachne akirai glue on intact mothwings, denuded cuticle and glass to the glue of a common orb-weaving spider, Larinioides cornutus, to understand how C. akirai glue overcomes dirty surfaces. Videos show that C. akirai 's glue spreading accelerates along the underlying moth cuticle after the glue seeps beneath the moth scales—not seen on denuded cuticle or hydrophilic glass. Larinioides cornutus glue droplets failed to penetrate the moth scales, their force of adhesion thus limited by the strength of attachment of scales to the cuticle. The large size and low viscosity of C. akirai glue droplets function together to use the three-dimensional topography of the moth's scales against itself via capillary forces. Infrared spectroscopy shows C. akirai glue droplets readily lose free-flowing water. We hypothesize that this loss of water leads to increased viscosity during spreading, increasing cohesive forces during pull-off. This glue's two-phase behaviour shows how natural selection can leverage a defensive specialization of prey against themselves and highlights a new design principle for synthetic adhesives for adhering to troublesome surfaces.
-Three Japanese spider species, which have been placed in the genus Zilla, are moved to the genus Eriophora, based on cladistic analysis.
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