Fiona Cross
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.
Fiona Ruth Cross | |
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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 |
Cross is best known for detecting food preference in East African Evarcha culicivora spiders for female Anopheles mosquitos fed recently on mammalian blood.[1][2][3]
Selected works
- Attentional processes in mosquito-eating jumping spiders: search imagesand cross-modality priming PhD thesis. University of Canterbury 2009.
- How mosquito-eating jumping spiders communicate: complex display sequences, selective attention and cross-modality priming MSc thesis. University of Canterbury 2003.
- Natural diet and prey-choice behaviour of Aelurillus muganicus (Araneae: Salticidae), a myrmecophagic jumping spider from Azerbaijan in Journal of Zoology, 2005.
- Male and Female Mate-Choice Decisions by Evarcha culicivora, An East African Jumping Spider in Ethology 2007.
- Complex display behaviour of Evarcha culicivora, an East African mosquitoâeating jumping spider in New Zealand Journal of Zoology 2010.
- How blood-derived odor influences mate-choice decisions by a mosquito-eating predator in PNAS, 2009
gollark: I should also learn C, and Java.
gollark: I should learn Python so that I can understand the cool Python submissions.
gollark: LyricLy will be done by 2026, since we rescheduled 2025 for 2094.
gollark: Fun idea (if it gets done in the next round it is !!NOT ME!!): implement [BEE LANGUAGE] in C, Java and Python, and make a polyglot of all those interpreters, and write the actual submission logic in [BEE LANGUAGE].
gollark: Yes, a "based" (pH > 8) implementation would implement actual forth and use that.
References
- "BBC World Service - News - Why a spider that likes smelly socks could help fight against malaria". bbc.co.uk.
- Fountain, Henry (26 October 2009). "The Alluring Power of Blood in Spiders". The New York Times.
- "Fiona Cross".
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