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When a daddy longlegs is attacked by a flatworm things get messy

In the forests of Brazil, pitched gladiatorial contests are being fought between flatworms armed with slime and spider-like arachnids with body-chopping spikes
A tasty, but well-defended, lunch
A tasty, but well-defended, lunch
Rodrigo H. Willemart

In a battle worthy of gore and grime fetishists, slimy flatworms attack harvestman arachnids with gobs of mucus. But the arachnids sometimes fight back by chopping the worms in half with armoured leg spikes.

The armoured harvestman () is an eight-legged arachnid, distantly related to spiders. are sometimes known as “daddy longlegs”, although confusingly so are .

The armoured harvestman has a lot of problems in life. Its predators include birds, toads, lizards, marsupials and even insects such assassin bugs.

As a result, it has evolved a number of defence mechanisms, says zoologist at the University of São Paulo in Brazil. It has thick armour – hence its name – and it can also fake its own death, run away, or pinch attackers with its spiny mouthparts.

In the name of science, Willemart and his colleagues decided to see what kind of fight the arachnids would put up against a Brazilian terrestrial flatworm (). “Such battles are happening every night in Brazilian tropical forests,”he says.

Battle is joined
Battle is joined
Rodrigo H. Willemart

They pitted 32 harvestmen against 32 flatworms in separate battles, all taking place in glass casserole dishes. Willemart says it was like watching a miniature version of .

In all, 22 flatworms attacked. Two succeeded in subduing harvestmen with their slimy mucus, after first striking with their heads.

The worms have a mouth in the middle of their bodies, which has a throat they can turn inside out. When attacking the harvestmen, they remove the arachnids’ mouth parts and front legs then suck their guts out of the leftover hole.

The harvestmen’s armour wasn’t much help against the worms. However, 15 secreted smelly chemicals, causing the worms to retreat – although the team says they might not work against the harvestmen’s other enemies, like scorpions and spiders.

Most dramatically, two harvestmen used the spikes on their rear pair of legs to chop the attacking worms in half.

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Surviving a flatworm attack still brought costs for the harvestmen, though. The authors put those arachnids that had been slimed but survived the attack on a running track. They found that they walked significantly less than uninjured harvestmen. Plus, they still had worm slime on them 30 hours later.

Journal of Zoology

Topics: Biology / Ecology / Invertebrates / Predators / spiders / Worms