Latrodectus


Latrodectus is a broadly distributed genus of spiders informally called the widow spiders, with several species that are commonly known as the true widows. This group is composed of those often called black widow spiders, brown widow spiders, and similar spiders.

Diversity

A member of the family Theridiidae, this genus contains 34 species, which include several North American "black widows". Besides these, North America also has the red widow Latrodectus bishopi and the brown widow Latrodectus geometricus, which, in addition to North America, has a much wider geographic distribution.
Elsewhere, others include the European black widow, the Australian redback spider and the closely related New Zealand katipō, several different species in Southern Africa that can be called button spiders, and the South American black-widow spiders. Species vary widely in size. In most cases, the females are dark-coloured and can be readily identified by reddish markings on the central underside abdomen, which are often hourglass-shaped.

Venom

These small spiders have an unusually potent venom containing the neurotoxin latrotoxin, which causes the condition latrodectism, both named after the genus. Female widow spiders have unusually large venom glands, and their bite can be particularly harmful to large vertebrates, including humans. However, despite their notoriety, Latrodectus bites rarely cause death or produce serious complications. Only the bites of the females are dangerous to humans.
Due to the presence of latrotoxin in their venom, black widow bites are potentially dangerous and may result in systemic effects including severe muscle pain, abdominal cramps, diaphoresis, tachycardia, and muscle spasms. Symptoms usually last for 3–7 days, but may persist for several weeks. In 1933, a University of Alabama medical faculty, Allan Blair conducted an experiment on himself to document the symptoms of a black widow bite, and to test whether someone can build immunity after being bitten. The effects of the bite were so painful and harsh that Blair failed to complete the experiment and did not follow through with being bitten a second time.
In the United States each year, about 2,500 people report being bitten by a black widow, but most do not need medical treatment. Some bites have no venom injected—⁠a "dry" bite. In the United States, a 2012 review by the American Association of Poison Control Centers found no deaths from black widows since 1983. Black widows are not especially aggressive spiders, and they rarely bite humans unless startled or otherwise threatened.
Contrary to popular assumptions, most people who are bitten suffer no serious damage, let alone death. Fatal bites were reported in the early 20th century mostly with Latrodectus tredecimguttatus, the Mediterranean black widow.
Since the venom is not usually life-threatening, antivenom has been used as pain relief and not to save lives. However, a study demonstrated that standardized pain medication, when combined with either antivenom or a placebo, had similar improvements in pain and resolution of symptoms.

Description

Female widow spiders are typically dark brown or a shiny black in colour when they are full grown, usually exhibiting a red or orange hourglass on the ventral surface of the abdomen; some may have a pair of red spots or have no marking at all. The male widow spiders often exhibit various red or red and white markings on the dorsal surface of the abdomen, ranging from a single stripe to bars or spots, and juveniles are often similar to the male pattern. Females of a few species are paler brown and some have no bright markings. The bodies of black widow spiders range from in size; some females can measure in their body length. Including legs, female adult black widows generally measure.

Behaviour

The prevalence of sexual cannibalism, a behaviour in which the female eats the male after mating, has inspired the common name "widow spiders". This behaviour may promote the survival odds of the offspring; however, females of some species only rarely show this behaviour, and much of the documented evidence for sexual cannibalism has been observed in laboratory cages where the males could not escape. Male black widow spiders tend to select their mates by determining if the female has eaten already to avoid being eaten themselves. They are able to tell if the female has fed by sensing chemicals in the web. Latrodectus hesperus is referred to as an "opportunistic cannibal" because in dire situations it will resort to cannibalism. In addition to sexual cannibalism, Latrodectus hesperus are also known to engage in sibling cannibalism.
Like other members of the Theridiidae, widow spiders construct a web of irregular, tangled, sticky silken fibres. Black widow spiders prefer to nest near the ground in dark and undisturbed areas, usually in small holes produced by animals, or around construction openings or woodpiles. Indoor nests are in dark, undisturbed places such as under desks or furniture or in a basement. The spider frequently hangs upside down near the centre of its web and waits for insects to blunder in and get stuck. Then, before the insect can extricate itself, the spider rushes over to envenomate and wrap it in silk. To feed, the spider's mouth pulses digestive juices over the prey, which liquifies, which the spider internalizes by capillary action, sucking the slurry into its mouth. Their prey consists of small insects such as flies, mosquitoes, grasshoppers, beetles, and caterpillars. If the spider perceives a threat, it quickly lets itself down to the ground on a safety line of silk.
As with other web-weavers, these spiders have very poor eyesight and depend on vibrations reaching them through their webs to find trapped prey or warn them of larger threats. When a widow spider is trapped, it is unlikely to bite, preferring to play dead or flick silk at the potential threat; bites occur when they cannot escape. Many injuries to humans are due to defensive bites delivered when a spider gets unintentionally squeezed or pinched. The blue mud dauber species, Chalybion californicum, is a wasp that, in western North America, is the primary predator of black widow spiders.
The ultimate tensile strength and other physical properties of Latrodectus hesperus silk are similar to the properties of silk from orb-weaving spiders that had been tested in other studies. The tensile strength for the three kinds of silk measured in the Blackledge study was about 1,000 MPa. The ultimate strength reported in a previous study for Trichonephila edulis was 1,290 ± 160 MPa. The tensile strength of spider silk is comparable to that of steel wire of the same thickness. However, as the density of steel is about six times that of silk, silk is correspondingly stronger than steel wire of the same weight.
Spiders of the genus Steatoda are often mistaken for widow spiders, and are known as "false widow spiders"; while their bite can be painful, they are significantly less harmful to humans.

Taxonomy

The genus Latrodectus was erected by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1805, for the species Latrodectus tredecimguttatus and Latrodectus mactans. Arachnologist Herbert Walter Levi revised the genus in 1959, studying the female sexual organs and noting their similarity across described species. He concluded the colour variations were variable across the world and were not sufficient to warrant species status, and reclassified the redback and several other species as subspecies of the black widow spider.
Levi also noted that study of the genus had been contentious; in 1902, both F. O. Pickard-Cambridge and Friedrich Dahl had revised the genus, with each criticising the other. Cambridge questioned Dahl's separating species on what he considered minor anatomical details, and the latter dismissed the former as an "ignoramus".

Species

, this genus includes 35 species:Latrodectus antheratusParaguay, ArgentinaLatrodectus apicalis Butler, 1877 – GalapagosLatrodectus bishopi Kaston, 1938 – United StatesLatrodectus cinctus Blackwall, 1865 – Cape Verde, Africa, Oman, Kuwait, Iraq, IranLatrodectus corallinus Abalos, 1980 – Brazil, ArgentinaLatrodectus curacaviensis – Caribbean, South AmericaLatrodectus dahli Levi, 1959 – North Africa, Cyprus, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Middle East, Iran, Central AsiaLatrodectus diaguita Carcavallo, 1960 – ArgentinaLatrodectus elegans Thorell, 1898 – India, Nepal, Myanmar, China, JapanLatrodectus erythromelas Schmidt & Klaas, 1991 – India, Sri LankaLatrodectus garbae Rueda & Realpe, 2021 – ColombiaLatrodectus geometricus C. L. Koch, 1841 – Africa. Introduced to both Americas, St. Helena, Middle East, Pakistan, India, China, Japan, Thailand, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Australia, HawaiiLatrodectus hasselti Thorell, 1870 – Southeast Asia to Australia. Introduced to Pakistan, India, Japan, New ZealandLatrodectus hesperus Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935 – Canada, United States, Mexico. Introduced to Israel, KoreaLatrodectus hurtadoi Rueda & Realpe, 2021 – ColombiaLatrodectus hystrix Simon, 1890 – Yemen Latrodectus indistinctus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1904 – Namibia, South AfricaLatrodectus karrooensis Smithers, 1944 – South AfricaLatrodectus katipo Powell, 1871 – New ZealandLatrodectus lilianae Melic, 2000 – SpainLatrodectus mactans – Probably native to North America only. Introduced to South America, AsiaLatrodectus menavodi Vinson, 1863 – Madagascar, Comoros, Seychelles Latrodectus mirabilisBrazil, ArgentinaLatrodectus obscurior Dahl, 1902 – Cape Verde, MadagascarLatrodectus occidentalis Valdez-Mondragón, 2023 – MexicoLatrodectus pallidus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 – Cape Verde to Libya, South Africa, Turkey, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Iran, Central AsiaLatrodectus quartus Abalos, 1980 – ArgentinaLatrodectus renivulvatus Dahl, 1902 – St. Helena, Africa, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, IraqLatrodectus revivensis Shulov, 1948 – Israel, Iran, Canary Islands?Latrodectus rhodesiensis Mackay, 1973 – Namibia, Botswana, Zimbabwe, South AfricaLatrodectus thoracicus Nicolet, 1849 – ChileLatrodectus tredecimguttatus – Mediterranean, Ukraine, Caucasus, Russia, Kazakhstan, Middle East, Iran, Central Asia, China Latrodectus umbukwane B. M. O. G. Wright, C. D. Wright, Lyle & Engelbrecht, 2019 – South AfricaLatrodectus variegatus Nicolet, 1849 – Chile, ArgentinaLatrodectus variolus Walckenaer, 1837 – Canada, United States
Nomina dubia
  • L. dotatus C. L. Koch, 1841
  • L. limacidus Cantor, 1842
  • L. pallidus Caporiacco, 1933

Distribution

Widow spiders are found on every continent of the world except Antarctica. In North America, the black widows commonly known as southern, western, and northern are found in the United States, equally in western Mexico, as well as parts of southern Canada – particularly in the Okanagan Valley of British Columbia, as are the "grey" or "brown widow spiders" and the "red widow spiders".
The most prevalent species occurring in eastern Asia and Australia is commonly called the redback.
They are often confused with spiders in the genus Steatoda, known as false widow spiders, due to their similar appearance.