Fiona Cross

Last updated

Fiona Ruth Cross
Alma mater University of Canterbury
Scientific career
Fields Arachnology
Institutions University of Canterbury
Thesis Attentional processes in mosquito-eating jumping spiders: search images and cross-modality priming  (2009)
Website Canterbury University page

Fiona Ruth Cross is a New Zealand arachnologist. She did both her MSc and PhD theses at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand. [1] [2]

Contents

Cross is best known for detecting food preference in East African Evarcha culicivora spiders for female Anopheles mosquitos fed recently on mammalian blood. [3] [4] [5]

Selected works

Related Research Articles

<i>Evarcha</i> Genus of spiders

Evarcha is a genus of spiders in the family Salticidae with 85 species distributed across the world.

Paracyrba is a genus of jumping spiders found only in Malaysia. It contains only one species, Paracyrba wanlessi. Its microhabitat are the water-filled hollow internodes of decaying bamboo, where it preys for aquatic animals, especially mosquito larvae. P. wanlessi and Evarcha culicivora, a jumping spider, are the only two spiders that have been experimentally studied and considered a mosquito specialist. E. culicivora indirectly feeds vertebrate blood by preying female mosquitos that carry blood. In general only one specimen is found per occupied bamboo internode.

<i>Evarcha culicivora</i> Species of spider

Evarcha culicivora is a species of jumping spider found only around Lake Victoria in Kenya and Uganda. At maturity, E. culicivora spiders have an average size of 5 mm for both males and females. The range in size for either sex is quite small, with females being only slightly larger on average.

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References

  1. Cross, Fiona (2003). How mosquito-eating jumping spiders communicate: complex display sequences, selective attention and cross-modality priming (Masters thesis). UC Research Repository, University of Canterbury. doi:10.26021/9312. hdl:10092/1953.
  2. Cross, Fiona (2009). Attentional processes in mosquito-eating jumping spiders: search imagesand cross-modality priming (Doctoral thesis). UC Research Repository, University of Canterbury. doi:10.26021/7313. hdl:10092/4441.
  3. "BBC World Service - News - Why a spider that likes smelly socks could help fight against malaria". bbc.co.uk.
  4. Fountain, Henry (26 October 2009). "The Alluring Power of Blood in Spiders". The New York Times.
  5. "Fiona Cross".