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Robert R Jackson
Department of Zoology
University of Canterbury
Private Bag 4800
Christchurch
NEW ZEALAND
Fax:
64-3-364-2024
Phone (Office): 64-3-364-2064
Phone (Zoology Department): 64-3-364-2071 (or 2860)
email: r.jackson@zool.canterbury.ac.nz
Born:
North Carolina, USA
Education
University of California
Berkeley, California, USA
Ph.D. 1976
Primary research
Basic research on communication systems,
conditional predatory strategies, predator-prey co-evolution, perception
and animal cognition have been primary objectives in my research
for the past 24 years been at the University of Canterbury.
My primary study animals have been spiders, especially salticid
spiders, an exceptional animal group because of their unique, complex
eyes vision-guided predatory strategies and problem- solving ability.
Research interest includes salticid and other spiders from not only
New Zealand but also from many other parts of the world. Tropical
research is a major emphasis.
Research related
to ants
The biology of many salticids, and
other spiders, is linked to the biology of ants. Salticids that
routinely prey on ants (myrmecophagic species) and salticids that
are ant- like in appearance (myrmecomorphic species) have been
of particular interest. However, most salticids are neither myrmecophagic
nor myrmecomorphic. Yet ants appear to be highly relevant even
to these 'ordinary salticids'. Ants often prey on salticids, and ants
may be the primary predators of salticids in the tropics. Questions
about how salticids, and other spiders, detect, recognize and interact
with ants have become important areas of my research.
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