“…All spiders were kept and our tests carried out in a behavioural laboratory at the Department of Entomology (Budapest, Hungary, 47°28´50˝N, 19°02´25˝E, 125 m a.s.l.). The plastic trays holding the Petri dishes with spiders were surrounded with a cardboard panel, and to minimize human disturbance, we only went into locomotor activity in spiders can be circadian (Cloudsley-Thompson, 1987, 2000, higher-frequency (ultradian) endogenous rhythms can control their motor activity (Suter, 1993), they may not be purely nocturnal or diurnal (Suter & Benson, 2014) and even the locomotor activity of cavedwelling species may be controlled by free-running circadian rhythms (Soriano-Morales et al, 2013). However, less attention has been given to sexual differences among spiders in either their rhythmic processes or diel activity (e.g., Schmitt et al, 1990;Krumpalová & Tuf, 2013).…”