Published December 31, 2023 | Version v1
Figure Open

FIGURE 4. Burrowing techniques observed among the studied arthropod predators. A in Linking burrow morphology to the behaviors of predatory soil arthropods: Applications to continental ichnofossils

Description

FIGURE 4. Burrowing techniques observed among the studied arthropod predators. A) Initial burrowing by intrusion by Scolopendra polymorpha (burrow opening at arrow). B) Burrowing by intrusion by Hogna lenta. C) Continued construction of a vertical shaft by compression by Gorgyrella inermis, compressing sediment along burrow boundary (at arrow) to increase the width. D) Subsurface tunnel construction by intrusion by Hemiscolopendra marginata. No sediment is removed as the tunnel is extended but is pressed against the tunnel boundary (at arrow). E) Burrowing by excavation by Mastigoproctus giganteus. Sediment is removed and carried with the pedipalps (at arrow). F) Burrowing by excavation by Pelinobus muticus. Sediment is removed and carried with the pedipalps (at arrow). G) Burrowing by excavation by Hadrurus arizonensis. Sediment is scraped and kicked back out (at arrow) of the developing burrow with the first two pairs of legs. H) Backfilling of a tunnel by S. polymorpha. The centipede removes sediment from the developing tunnel and uses it to fill the old tunnel (at arrow). I) Light silk lining around the opening, shaft, and chamber (at arrows) of Hysterocrates gigas. J) Thick silk lining around the shaft (at arrow) of G. inermis producing a smooth interior surface. K) Six silk runners (example at arrow) connected to the burrow entrance of G. inermis with a closed trap door.

Notes

Published as part of Hembree, Daniel I., 2023, Linking burrow morphology to the behaviors of predatory soil arthropods: Applications to continental ichnofossils, pp. 1-30 in Palaeontologia Electronica (a22) 26 (2) on page 7, DOI: 10.26879/1257, http://zenodo.org/record/12655095

Files

figure.png

Files (16.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:50fb21ea4d8df66b9fad79813776dcb9
16.4 MB Preview Download

Linked records

Additional details

Related works

Is part of
Journal article: 10.26879/1257 (DOI)
Journal article: urn:lsid:plazi.org:pub:C032C439FFCD0579BA5967742F43551D (LSID)
Journal article: https://zenodo.org/record/12655095 (URL)