Researchers say their hunting method - which allows them to prey on dangerous ants - is unprecedented.

The snare’s “exceptionally high power” flings the ant into a bigger web at “15 times the most extreme g-forces experienced by jet pilots”, said lead researcher Prof Ajay Narendra.

“The snare mechanism seems to have evolved as a highly specialised way of allowing the spider to ‘pick off’ potentially hazardous prey one at a time and transport them a safe distance away from ant trails and nests,” researcher Dr Jonas Wolff said.

  • DearMoogle@piefed.social
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    4 days ago

    Within moments, scientists found green ants approached the trap and bit it - causing the snare to spring and the prey to be launched into the spider’s web at “extreme” acceleration.

    And so the ant victim seemingly disappears, no pheromone trail for other ants to follow and cause harm to the spider. Mother Nature is so clever!