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Dive into the research topics where Matthew L. M. Lim is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew L. M. Lim.


Journal of Animal Ecology | 2010

Mechanisms driving change: altered species interactions and ecosystem function through global warming

Lochran W. Traill; Matthew L. M. Lim; Navjot S. Sodhi

1. We review the mechanisms behind ecosystem functions, the processes that facilitate energy transfer along food webs, and the major processes that allow the cycling of carbon, oxygen and nitrogen, and use case studies to show how these have already been, and will continue to be, altered by global warming. 2. Increased temperatures will affect the interactions between heterotrophs and autotrophs (e.g. pollination and seed dispersal), and between heterotrophs (e.g. predators-prey, parasites/pathogens-hosts), with generally negative ramifications for important ecosystem services (functions that provide direct benefit to human society such as pollination) and potential for heightened species co-extinction rates. 3. Mitigation of likely impacts of warming will require, in particular, the maintenance of species diversity as insurance for the provision of basic ecosystem services. Key to this will be long-term monitoring and focused research that seek to maintain ecosystem resilience in the face of global warming. 4. We provide guidelines for pursuing research that quantifies the nexus between ecosystem function and global warming. These include documentation of key functional species groups within systems, and understanding the principal outcomes arising from direct and indirect effects of a rapidly warming environment. Localized and targeted research and monitoring, complemented with laboratory work, will determine outcomes for resilience and guide adaptive conservation responses and long-term planning.


Current Biology | 2008

UVB-based mate-choice cues used by females of the jumping spider Phintella vittata.

Jingjing Li; Zengtao Zhang; Fengxiang Liu; Qingqing Liu; Wenjin Gan; Jian Chen; Matthew L. M. Lim; Daiqin Li

Although there are numerous examples of animals having photoreceptors sensitive to UVA (315-400 nm) [1] and relying on UVA-based mate-choice cues [2-5], here we provide the first evidence of an animal using UVB (280-315 nm) for intraspecific communication. An earlier study showed that Phintella vittata, a jumping spider (Salticidae) from China, reflects UVB [6]. By performing six series of binary mate-choice experiments in which we varied lighting conditions with filters (UVB+ [no filter] versus UVB-, UVB+ versus ND1, UVB+ versus ND2, UVB- versus ND1, UVB- versus ND2, and UVB- versus UVA-), we show that significantly more UVB + males than UVB- males are chosen by females as preferred mates. Female preference for UVB-reflective males is not affected by differences in brightness or by UVA.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2007

Effects of age and feeding history on structure-based UV ornaments of a jumping spider (Araneae: Salticidae)

Matthew L. M. Lim; Daiqin Li

Recent studies have shown for birds that females sometimes choose mates on the basis of condition-dependent variation in ultraviolet (UV, less than 400 nm) ornamentation, but there have been few comparable studies on invertebrates. Yet many invertebrates have UV structural coloration. Here, we investigate Cosmophasis umbratica, a jumping spider (Araneae: Salticidae) that has sexually dimorphic UV-iridescent ornamentation, and we provide evidence that male UV coloration is condition dependent in this species. Spectral-reflection patterns change with male age and prior feeding history. The position of the UV band (i.e. UV hue) of the carapaces of younger (field-collected as subadults and matured as adults in laboratory) males shifted, relative to older (field-collected as adults) males, significantly towards longer wavelengths. Food deprivation significantly decreased the spectral intensity of the abdomen, but not the carapace. Questions concerning the mechanisms by which UV ornaments change are highlighted, as are hypotheses concerning the role of condition-dependent UV variation in male–male competition and as a criterion used by females when making mate-choice decisions.


Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2007

Optics of the ultraviolet reflecting scales of a jumping spider

Michael F. Land; Julia Horwood; Matthew L. M. Lim; Daiqin Li

The jumping spider Cosmophasis umbratica from Singapore is strongly sexually dimorphic. The males, but not the females, reflect ultraviolet as well as green–orange light. The scales responsible for this are composed of a chitin–air–chitin sandwich in which the chitin layers are three-quarters of a wavelength thick and the air gap a quarter wavelength (where λ=600 nm, the peak wavelength of the principal reflection maximum). It is shown that this configuration produces a second reflectance peak at approximately 385 nm, accounting for the observed reflection in the ultraviolet. Other scales have a similar thickness of chitin but lack the air gap and thus produce a dull purple reflection. This novel mechanism provides the spiders with two colour signals, both of which are important in mating displays.


Animal Behaviour | 2005

Ultraviolet cues affect the foraging behaviour of jumping spiders

Daiqin Li; Matthew L. M. Lim

Jumping spiders have long been known to have large principal eyes with ultraviolet (UV) receptors, and many species of their arthropod prey have body parts that reflect strongly in the UV waveband. However, no attempt has been made to investigate the effects of UV cues from prey on the foraging behaviour of jumping spiders. We performed laboratory experiments to test the hypothesis that jumping spiders use UV cues for locating and discriminating prey. We used Portia labiata, a web-invading, spider-eating jumping spider, as the predator and Argiope versicolor, an orb-web-building spider that decorates its web with UV-reflecting silk stabilimenta, as prey. Portia labiata could detect the difference between UV-reflecting and non-UV-reflecting stabilimentum-decorated webs and they preferentially approached the UV-reflecting ones. These findings may have wide implications for studies of animal foraging, and support one hypothesized function of salticid UV vision, the role of which is largely unknown.


Evolution | 2015

Prey from the eyes of predators: Color discriminability of aposematic and mimetic butterflies from an avian visual perspective.

Shiyu Su; Matthew L. M. Lim; Krushnamegh Kunte

Predation exerts strong selection on mimetic butterfly wing color patterns, which also serve other functions such as sexual selection. Therefore, specific selection pressures may affect the sexes and signal components differentially. We tested three predictions about the evolution of mimetic resemblance by comparing wing coloration of aposematic butterflies and their Batesian mimics: (a) females gain greater mimetic advantage than males and therefore are better mimics, (b) due to intersexual genetic correlations, sexually monomorphic mimics are better mimics than female‐limited mimics, and (c) mimetic resemblance is better on the dorsal wing surface that is visible to predators in flight. Using a physiological model of avian color vision, we quantified mimetic resemblance from predators’ perspective, which showed that female butterflies were better mimics than males. Mimetic resemblance in female‐limited mimics was comparable to that in sexually monomorphic mimics, suggesting that intersexual genetic correlations did not constrain adaptive response to selection for female‐limited mimicry. Mimetic resemblance on the ventral wing surface was better than that on the dorsal wing surface, implying stronger natural and sexual selection on ventral and dorsal surfaces, respectively. These results suggest that mimetic resemblance in butterfly mimicry rings has evolved under various selective pressures acting in a sex‐ and wing surface‐specific manner.


Behaviour | 2003

Age-dependent stabilimentum-associated predator avoidance behaviours in orb-weaving spiders

Daiqin Li; Lai Mun Kok; Wee Khee Seah; Matthew L. M. Lim

(Acc. 5-VIII-2003) Summary In this study, we investigated stabilimentum-associated predator-avoidance behaviours of an orb-weaving spider, Argiope versicolor , by addressing two questions: (1) Is there any difference in predator-avoidance behaviour between juveniles and adults? (2) Is a predatoravoidance behaviour stabilimentum-specie c? Two types of artie cial stimuli, tactile stimulation and air movement, were used, and both elicited four avoidance behavioural responses in A. versicolor : ‘ shuttling’ , ‘ pumping’ , ‘ dropping’ , and ‘ shifting’ . Overall, juveniles were more likely than adults to respond to the stimuli. Adults frequently responded to disturbance by dropping and pumping, whereas juveniles by shuttling and shifting. More importantly, A. versicolor adopted stabilimentum-specie c predator-avoidance tactics. Juveniles shuttled more often on discoid-stabilimentum-decorated webs than on undecorated webs, whereas adult females dropped from undecorated webs more frequently than from cruciform-stabilimentumdecorated webs. Moreover, adults pumped their webs more often on webs with cruciform stabilimenta than on webs without cruciform stabilimenta.


Science | 2008

Conservation with sense

Matthew L. M. Lim; Navjot S. Sodhi; John A. Endler

With habitat loss and degradation occurring at an unprecedented rate, the protection of imperiled ecosystems has become a priority in conservation efforts ([1][1]). Amidst the urgency to conserve wildlife, we propose a word of caution: Relying on the human perceptual world, instead of the sometimes


PLOS ONE | 2013

UV-Green Iridescence Predicts Male Quality during Jumping Spider Contests

Matthew L. M. Lim; Daiqin Li

Animal colour signals used in intraspecies communications can generally be attributed to a composite effect of structural and pigmentary colours. Notably, the functional role of iridescent coloration that is ‘purely’ structural (i.e., absence of pigments) is poorly understood. Recent studies reveal that iridescent colorations can reliably indicate individual quality, but evidence of iridescence as a pure structural coloration indicative of male quality during contests and relating to an individual’s resource-holding potential (RHP) is lacking. In age- and size-controlled pairwise male-male contests that escalate from visual displays of aggression to more costly physical fights, we demonstrate that the ultraviolet-green iridescence of Cosmophasis umbratica predicts individual persistence and relates to RHP. Contest initiating males exhibited significantly narrower carapace band separation (i.e., relative spectral positions of UV and green hues) than non-initiators. Asymmetries in carapace and abdomen brightness influenced overall contest duration and escalation. As losers retreated upon having reached their own persistence limits in contests that escalated to physical fights, losers with narrower carapace band separation were significantly more persistence. We propose that the carapace UV-green iridescence of C. umbratica predicts individual persistence and is indicative of a male’s RHP. As the observed UV-green hues of C. umbratica are ‘pure’ optical products of a multilayer reflector system, we suggest that intrasexual variations in the optical properties of the scales’ chitin-air-chitin microstructures are responsible for the observed differences in carapace band separations.


Journal of Tropical Ecology | 2012

Cross-habitat predation in Nepenthes gracilis : the red crab spider Misumenops nepenthicola influences abundance of pitcher dipteran larvae

Trina Jie Ling Chua; Matthew L. M. Lim

Phytotelmata (plant-held waters) are useful ecological models for studying predator-prey interactions. However, the ability of terrestrial predators to influence organism abundance within phytotelmata remains poorly studied. We investigated the predation of two pitcher-dwelling spiders, the red crab spider Misumenops nepenthicola and the yellow crab spider Thomisus nepenthiphilus (Araneae: Thomisidae) on dipteran larval abundance by manipulating their presence in the pitcher Nepenthes gracilis. Lower abundance in the larvae of the mosquito Tripteriodes spp. and increased spider mass were recorded after M. nepenthicola was introduced into laboratory-maintained pitchers (n=10); T. nepenthiphilus did not affect larval abundance and a decrease in spider mass was recorded. Further investigations on two other dipteran larval species, the scuttle fly Endonepenthia schuitemakeri and gall midges Lestodiplosis spp., reported reduced numbers with the introduction of M. nepenthicola. We further tested this predation on dipteran larval abundance by its introduction, removal, and re-introduction to pitchers in the field (n = 42) over 1 mo. The spiders absence and presence significantly influenced larval numbers: all four dipteran species reported a significant decrease in numbers after M. nepenthicola was introduced. These results are one of the first to demonstrate the influence of a terrestrial phytotelm forager on the abundance of pitcher organisms via direct predation, reiterating the ecological importance of terrestrial phytotelm predators on phytotelm community structure and dynamics.

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Daiqin Li

National University of Singapore

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Attilio Rapisarda

National University of Singapore

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Navjot S. Sodhi

National University of Singapore

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Simon L. Collinson

National University of Singapore

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Wee Khee Seah

National University of Singapore

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