One of the things I’ve been struggling with this past year has been spider systematics, and it has been frustrating. If I see one more taxonomic revision, I’m going to gag; every attempt to assemble a coherent picture of their evolution seems to be fragile and ready to fall apart. I don’t blame the scientists doing the work, I blame the spiders themselves for being diverse and complex.
However, I have never seen a diagram that so aptly illustrates the chaos of spider phylogeny unironically.
Whoa. It’s a schema of spider web evolution that is “certainly not a phylogenetic tree”. OK, what is a “schema” then? You’re using a tree structure as part of an explanatory framework, but the webs are drawn between the branches. How does that work, exactly? How am I supposed to interpret this diagram? What relationships are being elucidated? Am I just too old to be learning new stuff?
Why are there volcanoes erupting in the background?
Otherwise, it’s an informative paper. I’m beginning to think of some of their diagrams as an analogue to how Spider-Man will splat a blob of webbing in a bad guy’s face to shut him up or blind him.
I’m definitely going to have to go to the American Arachnological Society Meeting this year in June, just to hang about with some arachnologists and maybe absorb their attitude by osmosis or something, because I’m mainly just confused.
davidnangle says
Volcanos so that our time-travelling heroes have something to run from. Also, evocative of evolution. And Doug McClure. Spiders not drawn to scale.
Marcus Ranum says
What kind of spiders make webs that read “what a pig”?
And do they watch Fox news? How else would they learn about pigs?
Owlmirror says
Volcanic eruptions are useful geological markers of Deep Time (multiple instances of flood basalts and ash layers, dated to many millions of years before present), therefore, nothing says Deep Time like multiple erupting volcanoes.
Reginald Selkirk says
STOP THE PRESSES!
Horseshoe crabs are arachnids
doi 10.1093/sysbio/syz011
Although I don’t think they make webs.
bortedwards says
Ugh. Basalist fallacy. Scorpions are not “ancestral relatives” – both are contemporary relatives that share a common ancestor (that may, or may not look more or less scorpion-y than spider-y). The number of evolutionary biologists who can’t read (or apparently draw) phylogenetic trees properly is scary.