Bat-eating spiders are everywhere, study finds

Yasunori Maezono, Kyoto University, Japan

Bat-eating spiders are common and apparently creep around every continent, except Antarctica, devouring various bat species. Here, a dead bat (Rhinolophus cornutus orii) caught in the web of a female Nephila pilipes on Amami-O, Japan.

By Charles Choi, LiveScience

There's only one place in the world to escape bat-catching spiders: Antarctica. These arachnids ensnare and pounce on bats everywhere else in the world, researchers say.

Bats rank among the most successful groups of mammals, with the more than 1,200 species of bats comprising about one-fifth of all mammal species. Other than owls, hawks and snakes, bats have few natural enemies.

Still, invertebrates — creatures without backbones — have been known to dine on bats. For instance, giant centipedes in a cave in Venezuela were seen killing and eating bats, and the arachnids known as whip spiders were spotted feeding on dead bats in caves of the Caribbean. Cockroaches have been observed feeding on bat pups that have fallen to the floor of caves.

Spider-eat-bat world
Accidental deaths of bats in spiderwebs were known as well, but were thought to happen very rarely. Still, spiders are known to occasionally dine on a variety of vertebrates — creatures with backbones. For instance, fishing spiders capture and devour fish and frogs; some species of wolf spiders, huntsman spiders, tarantulas and related spiders have been seen killing and eating frogs and lizards; and tarantulas and comb-footed spiders have apparently fed on snakes and mice. There are also numerous reports of spiders killing other flying vertebrates, snagging birds with large orb webs. 

Recent studies of a web-building spider species (Argiope savignyi) and a tarantula species (Poecilotheria rufilata) both killing small bats led researchers to suggest that bat captures and kills due to spiders might be more frequent than previously thought. So they analyzed 100 years' worth of scientific reports, interviews of bat and spider researchers and the staff of bat hospitals, and scans of image and video sites. The search revealed 52 cases of bat-catching spiders worldwide. [See Photos of Bat-Eating Spiders in Action]

Giant webs
Approximately 90 percent of known bat-catching spiders live in the warmer areas of the globe, in the third of the Earth surrounding the equator. About 40 percent live in the neotropics — the whole of South America, and the tropical regions of North America — while nearly a third live in Asia and more than a sixth live in Australia and Papua New Guinea.

Eighty-eight percent of the reported cases of bat catches were due to web-building spiders, with giant tropical orb-weaving spiders with a leg-span of 4 to 6 inches seen catching bats in huge, strong orb-webs up to 5 feet wide. 

In instances seen in Costa Rica and Panama, the spiders had built their webs near buildings inhabited by bat colonies. Bat-catching via spiderwebs was also witnessed particularly often in the parks and forests of the greater Hong Kong area. Future research may investigate whether the huge webs that sometimes block the entrances of tropical bat caves in east and southeast Asia and the neotropics may occasionally snag any members of the giant swarms of bats that emerge from the caves at night. [Photos: Creepy, Crawly & Incredible Spiders]

The other 12 percent of cases of spider kills of bats were from spiders that hunt without webs. For instance, tarantulas were seen eating small bats in tropical rainforests in Peru and eastern Ecuador and on the forest floor in northeastern Brazil. A reddish parachute tarantula (Poecilotheria rufilata) was also seen predating on a small bat in Kerala, India, while a huntsman spider (Heteropoda venatoria) was observed capturing and killing a small bat in a shed near Kolkata, India. An attempt by a large fishing spider (Dolomedes triton) to kill a bat pup was also witnessed below a bridge in Indiana.

The victims
Most bat prey of spiders are small or juvenile insect-eating bats, and usually are among the most common bat species of their areas. Bats entangled in webs were usually 4 to 9.5 inches in wingspan, including some of the smallest species of bats in the world, and they sometimes died of exhaustion, starvation, dehydration or overheating — but there were many cases where spiders were seen actively attacking, killing and eating these victims.

Bats are likely capable of detecting spiderwebs via echolocation, their biological sonar. Even if bats do collide with spiderwebs, only the strongest traps are likely capable of withstanding the energy of such an impact without breaking. As such, bat captures are likely rare.

Still, as scarce as spider captures of bats likely are, they would prove well worth the effort. The catch of a 2-gram bat by the giant orb-weaving spider Nephila pilipes, a common killer of bats, would be a bonanza about 10 times the mass of the average daily catch of insect prey, researchers noted.

Martin Nyffeler and Mirjam Knörnschild detailed their findings online March 13 in the journal PLOS ONE.

Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience, Facebook or Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.

Copyright 2013 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

 

Discuss this post

Hm, wouldn't have known that. Not sure I wanted to.

  • 8 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 2:22 PM EDT

Technically speaking, spiders don't eat, they drink. They inject their prey with a liquid that dissolves the solids and then suck out the juice. The spider would need a lot of spit to dissolve a bats innards. I wonder if the spider drinks only the bats blood? I've observed that bats don't rot when they die, they mummify. So, the spider would have to deal with bat jerky, which would require even more spider spit. I've got more questions, so I'll have to do some research today.

  • 2 votes
#1.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 6:32 AM EDT

After reading this, how many want to move to Antarctica? Show of hands

  • 5 votes
#1.2 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 11:41 AM EDT

Actually, It doesn't take a lot of venom to dissolve a lot of solid material. Just look at what a brown recluse does to human tissue. A little bite can cause a huge problem, it just takes a little time. I personally don't want to come across a spider big enough, or powerful enough to eat, or "drink" a bat.

  • 1 vote
#1.3 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 11:45 AM EDT

What do they do with the baseball after they have disposed of the bat?

  • 1 vote
#1.4 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 3:40 PM EDT
Reply

Thanks! ... now you've given Hollywood ideas for more crappy films!

  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 2:57 PM EDT

Or at least a SciFi original...

  • 4 votes
#2.1 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 5:10 PM EDT

Original? Look up the film Arachnophobia

  • 1 vote
#2.2 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 10:07 AM EDT

@Jeff-

I was being sarcastic. SciFi is notorious for puking out a low-budget movie just as the high budget movie is about to be released...Yes I saw the original 1950s movie and to them back then must have been a blockbuster...Today, it's another @!$%#ty movie from the 1950s...

  • 1 vote
#2.3 - Mon Mar 18, 2013 1:10 AM EDT
Reply

Creepy, good to know that the big ones aren't found anywhere near me. But interesting to know none of the less.

  • 1 vote
Reply#3 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 3:12 PM EDT

Creepy, good to know that the big ones aren't found anywhere near me.

LOOK! BEHIND YOU!!!

  • 5 votes
Reply#4 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 4:53 PM EDT

So does this mean that Spiderman could beat Batman in a fight?

  • 15 votes
Reply#5 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 5:37 PM EDT

We all know that b4 this article. lol

    #5.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 10:07 AM EDT
    Reply

    If I saw one of those around my house I might just @!$%# myself. Friggin thing is as big as the infamous Clock Spider.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#6 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 6:48 PM EDT

    If this thing were under your bedcovers, they would ripple as it moved. Spider jaws.

    The worst thing is that if you don't sleep in a bed and opt for a hammock, well, that's not unlike a bat is it? There is no escape...

    • 1 vote
    #6.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 1:35 PM EDT
    Reply

    There was a picture of a praying mantis eating a hummingbird it caught a couple of years ago in Nat Geo.

    • 2 votes
    Reply#7 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 9:12 PM EDT

    No matter where you live, from the time you are born until the time you die you are never more than three feet from a spider. Have a nice day.

    • 3 votes
    Reply#8 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 9:36 PM EDT

    Well I have on several occasions jumped out of a perfectly good airplane. Does that mean that there are flying spiders ?

    • 2 votes
    #8.1 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 11:30 PM EDT

    Actually many spider species get around by "ballooning" on their silk, especially when they are young. They have been known to land on boats up to 1000 miles out to sea, and under the right (or actually wrong as they tend to get freeze-dried) circumstances they can make it all the way into the stratosphere.

    • 1 vote
    #8.2 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 1:10 AM EDT

    ...and you swallow 4 spiders a year in your sleep.

      #8.3 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 11:42 AM EDT
      Reply

      Hardly everywhere.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#9 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 10:16 PM EDT

      Time to bring in the spider-eating wasps.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#10 - Sat Mar 16, 2013 10:36 PM EDT

      Soooo, are they poisonous to humans? Just wondering..

      • 1 vote
      Reply#11 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 12:34 AM EDT

      All spiders are poisonus. However, most do not have the ability to penetrate human skin.

        #11.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 3:41 PM EDT
        Reply

        Note to self: Buy more Raid

        • 1 vote
        Reply#12 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 1:35 AM EDT

        That spider in the pic gave me goose bumps. It's huge. Good thing we are at the top of the food chain.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#13 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 2:37 AM EDT

        You are slowly being eaten alive by microscopic organisms.

        • 2 votes
        #13.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 9:30 AM EDT
        Reply

        Since both bats and spiders eat a lot of insects, the question is do they eat the pests that plague us humans so badly -- houseflies, cockroaches, mosquitoes, weevils, termites, etc.? It is ironic that they can be so beneficial as both species are so repulsive to us we use their images for Halloween, although to me bats, being fellow mammals, are less scary than black widows for instance, and as the only flying mammals are truly fascinating. Yet spiders are so much more common, and I'm sure glad there are no true flying spiders (at least none we know of). Bats are only a problem if they get into our "belfries", i.e. attics, in large colonies, and while a few can even become rabid, that happens far less than in skunks, raccoons, or dogs.

        • 2 votes
        Reply#14 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 2:56 AM EDT

        Batman better not piss off Spiderman. Or its curtains...

        • 1 vote
        Reply#15 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 7:53 AM EDT

        I fear I killed a spider this morning. Poor thing. It was unlucky that it was crawling on me whilst I was groggy. Usually they go into the Penalty Jar until I release them outside.

        Now here's a dilemma: We have a new cat (well, a used cat), and he found a spider last week and was quite interested in it. I released the spider outside, but in several months we will have the giant house spiders (actual name) looking for mates. Catch and release? Or let the cat hone his hunting skills?

        • 1 vote
        Reply#16 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 10:01 AM EDT

        Let the cat hone his hunting skills, they dont do it enough thats why the become fat and lazy lol

          #16.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 11:34 AM EDT

          The rule around my home is if you are inside, you die. If you are outside you live. Unless you are poisonous or creeping me out, then you die.
          I don't know why I do this to myself. I clicked on the link knowing I would see a photo that would make my skin crawl. But it's just so compelling isn't it. They are beautiful in their own way. But goodness they scare the crap out of me.

          • 1 vote
          #16.2 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 12:42 PM EDT
          Reply

          "We're going to need a bigger boat shoe."

          • 4 votes
          Reply#17 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 10:49 AM EDT

          Ah, the beautiful glorious blessings of god's splendid graces.

            Reply#18 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 11:32 AM EDT

            Maybe we can breed spiders to eat vampires and zombies.

              Reply#19 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 12:52 PM EDT

              Ugh... this is disgusting and creepy. See, this is why we need to wipe out these spiders. They feed and destroy our innocent creatures and are harmful to us as well. I mean seriously... spider webs that are 5 feet across? Just to think about something like that is just dreadful.

              I'm sorry but spiders just have no purpose on Earth whatsoever... TRUST me~.

                Reply#20 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 1:25 PM EDT

                Fortunately, ecological policy isn't derived from irrational phobias such as yours. Spiders are important predators in the food chain. Insectivores put a much needed ceiling on insect populations. It's all part of the equilibrium.

                • 2 votes
                #20.1 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 2:17 PM EDT

                If you ran into a spider-web five feet across, you might be very disgusted and feel a need to wipe it off. That is, however, the worst that would happen to you.

                • 1 vote
                #20.2 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 3:44 PM EDT

                Doesn't matter, anything that is harmful and scary to us is considered a threat and have you ever heard of anyone living with spiders at home? And no, I don't mean pet tarantulas.

                Anyways, the thought of these spiders getting bigger and bigger with spider webs that can be as high as a person.... ugh, it's like a nightmare come true. Seriously, what's next? Spiders catching birds with their webs? This is insane...

                  #20.3 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:01 PM EDT

                  John, get a grip, man! They're not really dangerous to you.

                    #20.4 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 6:20 PM EDT

                    Imagine the story the spider would have after John ran through the web, assuming it survives the experience.

                    John,

                    Spiders are the most significant insectivore on this planet. Without them, this planet would likely be overrun with insects.

                      #20.5 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 6:36 PM EDT
                      Reply

                      Didn't Mozart like to snack on live spiders?

                        Reply#21 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 4:22 PM EDT

                        Japan just hit the top of my list for having creepy bugs: First the giant hornet with 1/4" stinger and now an orb web-weaving spider that can take down a bat.

                          Reply#22 - Sun Mar 17, 2013 6:32 PM EDT

                          Japanese movie idea.

                          Godzilla versus the Giant Spider.

                            #22.1 - Mon Mar 18, 2013 1:07 PM EDT
                            Reply

                            Need to breed more of them and send them to Americus Georgia. That town is infested with bats and Jimmy Carter.

                              Reply#23 - Sat Mar 23, 2013 11:16 AM EDT
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