'Science Friday' highlights UC's research on jumping spiders

UC's Morehouse Lab is studying spiders that pretend to be ants. Their research identified the surprising ways the little imposters communicate with each other without exposing the ruse to predators

The national radio show "Science Friday" highlighted some fascinating biology research in the University of Cincinnati's Morehouse Lab on March 8.

UC student Alexis Dodson presented a paper this year at the Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology on jumping spiders that pretend to be ants. Dodson and her fellow researchers discovered that a jumping spider called Synemosyna formica mimics two different species of ant as it grows to sell the illusion to potential predators.

Baby spiders mimic a tiny ant called Crematogaster while the adult spiders mimic a bigger ant called Camponotus. UC researchers used an elliptical Fourier analysis to make the exacting comparison.

Dodson also discovered that while the baby spiders look like skinny three-segmented ants both from above and in profile, the adult spiders retain their spiderly proportions in profile, possibly to attract mates.

UC assistant professor Nathan Morehouse will use a $2 million grant from the National Science Foundation to study the extraordinary vision of jumping spiders around the world.

Dodson spoke about her UC research with host Ira Flatow.

A side by side comparison of jumping spiders and the ants they mimic.

Can you tell the spiders from the ants? UC researchers found that baby S. formica spiders, bottom left, closely resembled a tiny species of ant called Crematogaster, top left, while adult spiders, bottom right, mimicked a bigger species called Camponotus, top right. Photo/Alexis Dodson

More international news coverage:

Nathan Morehouse, UC biology professor, left and Alexis Dodson, UC student spoke about their research on jumping spiders in Morehouse lab at Rieveschl. UC/Joseph Fuqua II

UC student Alexis Dodson talks about ant mimics with UC assistant professor Nathan Morehouse. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative Services

Featured image at top: A jumping spider in UC biologist Nathan Morehouse's lab. Photo/Joseph Fuqua II/UC Creative Services

Related Stories

3

UC team unveils Wyandot Removal Trail across Ohio

October 24, 2025

Rebecca Wingo, an associate professor of history and director of the public history program in the University of Cincinnati’s College of Arts and Sciences, is featured in a WVXU story about new historical markers honoring the Wyandot people—the last Indigenous nation forcibly removed from Ohio.