Sometimes the spider becomes the prey. At least when assassin bug Stenolemus bituberus is on the job. The spindly-legged insect (pictured) lures arachnids to their deaths by landing on webs, struggling like entangled prey, and then
eating the arachnids for dinner. To figure out how the deception works, scientists placed spider webs in a sound chamber and recorded the vibrations when an assassin bug, a falling leaf, a courting male spider, or one of two types of prey (vinegar fly or aphid) touched the web. Spiders' reactions to the assassins most closely mirrored those toward prey: turning, pausing, and approaching 65% of the time and turning but not approaching 35% of the time. However, the spiders never aggressively approached the assassin bugs, the researchers report online today in the Proceedings of the Royal Society B. The scientists think this reflects a deliberate tactic of the assassins. By making only short, low-frequency vibrations, the predators mimicked the struggles of small or exhausted prey, duping the spiders into letting down their guard.
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apes, and humans. Researchers say the find indicates that our ancient ancestors were entrenched in Africa earlier than expected and that they didn't begin to get larger until well after they had moved to Africa and adapted to new environments there.
Researchers once thought that the first anthropoids arose in Africa. That's because for many years the earliest fossils of universally accepted anthropoids came from 37-million-year-old fossil beds in the Fayum region of Egypt. But over the past 16 years, scientists have discovered tiny primates in Asia that many think are the earliest known anthropoids, such as the 45-million-year-old Eosimias from Myanmar, says paleontologist Christopher Beard of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
If the date is correct, it would suggest that anthropoids left Asia soon after they arose there about 45 million years ago and dispersed to Africa and other parts of the globe much earlier than expected, says team leader and paleontologist Jean-Jacques Jaeger of the University of Poitiers in France. "Our goal is to nail down when these anthropoids got into Africa," adds Beard. An alternate view is that these tiny anthropoids arose in Africa instead of Asia, allowing enough time for them to evolve the diversity seen in these fossils from Libya. The team reports its find online today in Nature.
Although the identification of several of the fossils as early anthropoids is solid, not everyone is convinced that their age is accurate. Paleontologist Erik Seiffert of Stony Brook University in New York thinks that several of the fossils are so similar to those he and others have found in Egypt that they might be roughly the same age of 37 million years or younger—and thus not evidence for an earlier presence of anthropoids in Africa.
Paleontologist Richard Kay of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, notes, however, that the Libyan fossils are smaller than those in Egypt, suggesting that they may indeed be older and more primitive. Their small size and other features, Jaeger says, also link the Libyan fossils to the earliest anthropoids in Asia—but not to Ida, a 47-million-year-old fossil primate from Germany whose discoverers controversially proposed her as an ancestor of anthropoids.
Only after the first wee primates migrated out of Asia and scooted rapidly to new habitats in Africa did some anthropoids begin to get larger and start evolving down the path toward becoming apes—and, eventually, humans, he thinks. "If this migration to Africa had not occurred, the anthropoid might have become extinct in Asia and we would not be here," Jaeger says.

