Publishers Pensoft Publishers’ Study on Spider Megacolonies Sets New Publicity Records

Related Articles

A‌ research article published⁢ in the‍ journal Subterranean Biology has gained unprecedented popularity, surpassing nearly 27,000 other studies published by Pensoft. The paper, titled “An remarkable colonial spider‌ community in Sulfur Cave (Albania/Greece) sustained by chemoautotrophy” and authored by István Urák et al., has ⁣received meaningful ‌attention from both ‌news media and online platforms.

The ​Most ⁣Popular Research Article Across Pensoft’s Scientific Journal Portfolio

Published in the journal Subterranean Biology,this paper ⁢has become the most popular research article ever published across Pensoft’s⁢ scientific journal portfolio. It has achieved this feat in terms⁢ of both news media coverage ​and overall online ⁢attention.

issue​ 53 (2025) of ⁤Subterranean Biology, where the spider megacolony paper was published.

Thanks to an integration with our⁤ partners at Altmetric,⁢ we ‍have quantifiable ⁤metrics that measure just how exceptional the attention to this article is. The paper’s altmetric Attention Score of 2254 places it in the top 5% of‍ all research⁤ outputs scored by ⁢Altmetric globally. In less than a month, ‍it became more popular than nearly ​27,000 research papers published by Pensoft and tracked by ⁢Altmetric.

The study was covered globally by major news outlets, reaching audiences far beyond niche ⁢scientific circles. The article garnered over 2,200 ‍online mentions‍ linking⁣ directly to the publication, with ⁢Altmetric tracking attention from 290 news outlets specifically.⁢ the story was featured ⁤by ​numerous top global news organizations,including ⁢The ​New York Times,BBC,The Washington Post,The Independent,Die⁤ Welt⁣ and NBC ​News. It also received coverage from ⁣popular science publications such as Smithsonian ‍Magazine and ​Science Alert.

Beyond traditional media,the study gained significant traction on various social platforms such as YouTube,TikTok and Instagram. It ⁤also received mentions on Bluesky and X.

The Interesting ‍Discovery in Sulfur Cave

The paper details a fascinating discovery from sulfur Cave which⁤ sits‌ on the border between Albania and Greece. There,the research team documented ⁤an extraordinary spider community centered around a massive ⁤communal web spanning‍ more than 100 square ⁣meters. This giant structure,dense enough to resemble a living​ curtain,is home to an estimated ‍total of over 110000 ⁣spiders ‌comprised of approximately ⁣69000 ⁤Tegenaria domestica⁢ and 42000 prinerigone ⁢vagans individuals.

crucially,this study marks the first documented instance of colonial ‍behavior ‍in both‌ of⁤ these spider species and the first​ recorded‌ case of ‌colonial web-building in a chemoautotrophic cave environment.

This unusual coexistence, where the larger,normally predatory T. domestica does not eat the smaller P. vagans,is believed to be facilitated by the cave’s ​total darkness and,most ⁣importantly,the overwhelming abundance of food resources. The ecosystem is sustained entirely without sunlight through chemoautotrophy,where sulfur-oxidizing bacteria form biofilms that support invertebrates that serve as the spiders’ primary,highly dense food source.⁤ This​ specialized,isolated environment ‍has also driven⁣ the evolutionary adaptation of these spiders which are⁤ genetically distinct from their surface relatives,demonstrating remarkable genetic plasticity under extreme environmental conditions.

More on this topic

Comments

Leave a Reply to Sean Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Advertismentspot_img

Popular stories