“…They are sit‐and‐wait foragers that rely on a range of strategies to acquire prey. These strategies include modifying the architecture of the web in response to fluctuating prey availability (Blamires, ; Blamires, Martens, & Kasumovic, ; Blamires & Tso, ; Heiling & Herberstein, ; Sandoval, ; Schneider & Vollrath, ), and exploiting different sensory channels to attract prey to the vicinity of the web, for instance by adding odours (Henneken, Goodger, Jones, & Elgar, ), colours (Craig, Weber, & Bernard, ; Hsiung, Justyn, Blackledge, & Shawkey, ), silken decorations (Tan et al, ; Walter & Elgar, ; Yeh, Blamires, Liao, & Tso, ) or prey remains (Bjorkman‐Chiswell et al, ; Tan & Li, ) to their webs, as well as conspicuous colour patterns on the body (Peng, Blamires, Agnarsson, Lin, & Tso, ; Tso, Lin, & Yang, ). There is remarkable variation in the colour patterns of web‐building spiders, and the commonly seen yellow or orange mosaic pattern on the ventral surface of orb‐weaver spiders can serve as visual lures to enhance foraging success (Blamires et al, ; Chuang, Yang, & Tso, ; Liao, Liao, Blamires, & Tso, ; Tso, Liao, & Huang, ; Tso, Tai, Ku, Kuo, & Yang, ; see also White & Kemp, for a review).…”