William Wcislo, one of the staff scientists for the research, explained that even the tinnier spiders must maintain the amount of brain space needed todo complex behavior like weaving webs. Therefore, "the central nervous systems of the smallest spiders fill up almost 80 percent of their total body cavity, including about 25 percent of their legs." The smaller the spider, the more troublesome this can be for the animal. Tiny spiderlings often will have deformities and bulges in their bodies due to the excess amount of brain.
There is a biological basis for why this excess of brain must be the case. The diameter of nerve fibers cannot be smaller without becoming too thin, disrupting the flow of ions that carry the nerve signals. If the nervous system cannot be made smaller, the only alternative is to accommodate it with more room. By Haller's rule, a general rule for all animals, "as body size goes down, the proportion of the body taken up by the brain increases." We see this in all animals, even humans.
Seemingly, these large brains are not cumbersome. Much of what small spiders eat can easily be converted into energy to fee the brain. Larger spiders, such as the Nephila clavipes, weighing 400,000 times more than the smallest spiders in the study, clearly needs more food and energy to support its substantial body mass.
Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2011-12/stri-awn121211.php
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