Tarantulas Tangled Up In Blue

Tarantulas Tangled Up In Blue

BioTechniques

01/08/2016
Jesse Jenkins

 

Researchers studying the mysterious blue hue of tarantulas around the world say that mimicking this unique trait could improve technology you use every day. Read more…

More than 40 species of tarantulas around the world have independently evolved nanostructures in their exoskeletons to produce a near-identical blue hue. While this vibrant cobalt blue color may attract the attention of pet collectors or arachnophobes, a new study suggests that the color doesn’t attract mates, but instead results from natural selection.
“Tarantulas use chemotactile senses to navigate diverse surroundings and do not process visual courtship behavior, so their structural color isn’t for sexual signaling like many animals,” said Bor-Kai Hsiung, first author of a new study published in Science Advances. “This blue color is so specific and conserved to a certain narrow wavelength of hue that it must have some important evolutionary function as a visual signal for potential predators or prey.”

Using Internet databases, Hsiung’s team surveyed the colors of tarantulas from 53 genera and identified 40 genera with blue coloration. They obtained specimens from eight different species to analyze by microscopy and optical modeling.

“We saw different types of nanostructures, such as multilayer structures and quasi-ordered sponge-like structures. … These different types of nanostructures are all capable of producing infinite variations of colors from blue to red,” said Hsiung. “However, they all evolved to produce this specific blue using very different mechanisms, which is rare.”

Hsiung’s team next reconstructed evolutionary trees for the blue species, illustrating that the similar blue coloration had independently evolved at least eight times across multiple species through at least three divergent color-producing nanostructures.

Unlike the structural colors of birds or butterflies, tarantulas produce non-iridescent colors that maintain their hue when viewed from any angle. Understanding how tarantula nanostructures produce color could replace energy-intensive LCD technology, since active backlight illumination would not be required.

“We think the tarantula could be key to addressing these problems, and we are using different nanofabrication technologies to replicate the tarantula nanostructures and produce non-iridescent structural color,” said Hsiung.

Reference

Hsiung BK, Deheyn DD, Shawkey MD, Blackledge TA. Blue reflectance in tarantulas is evolutionarily conserved despite nanostructural diversity. Sci Adv. 2015 Nov 27;1(10):e1500709.

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