An amateur’s outlook on computation and mathematics

Argiope aurantia

by Brian Hayes

Published 7 October 2009

Argiope-aurantia-2499.jpg

It’s orb-weaving season in my part of the world. Out in the ivy, I have four webs of the golden orb weaver, Argiope aurantia, all within one square meter.

The engineering talents of all the orb weavers are impressive, but what attracts the eye to these particular webs is that bizarre zig-zag decoration, known as a stabilimentum. What’s it for? Does it attract prey? Or mates? Does it camouflage the spider? Does it make the spider look larger than it is, to discourage predators? Does it make the web more conspicuous, to ward off inadvertent damage from passing birds or mammals? Maybe it’s just a skein of spare silk? Or a sunscreen.

Someday we may know the answer, but the spider never will.

Tags for this article: biology.

Publication history

First publication: 7 October 2009

Converted to Eleventy framework: 22 April 2025

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