Toxeus magnus is a species of jumping spider of the genus Toxeus. It is endemic to Taiwan and Southeast Asia. The species was originally classified as a part of the genus Myrmarachne in 1933 by Saitō in his work Notes on the spiders from Formosa, but it was later reclassified as Toxeus by the Poland Arachnology Jerzy Prószyński in November 2016. The species is notable for being a non-mammalian animal that nurses its offspring through a form of lactation.
Toxeus magnus is exceptional because of its social behaviour. Of the nearly 48,000 known different species of only around 120 are known to be able to tolerate the company of others (including their own siblings) for more than three weeks, and only around 30 species of spiders are known to engage in life-long social lives.
Researchers attempted to discover how long the Toxeus magnus spiderlings can survive without their mother's "milk" by glueing her epigastric furrow shut. Blocking nursing immediately after birth resulted in complete mortality of the offspring, whereas blocking it 20 days after birth resulted in increased foraging and reduced survival. Even after the spiderlings started hunting themselves blocking them from their mother's "milk" decreased their chances of survival by about 50%.
For around the first week after the eggs hatch, a Toxeus magnus mother will leave "milk" droplets around her nest to be consumed by her offspring, after this initial period the mother will start to directly nurse her offspring. While the mother might occasionally hunt for Drosophilidae and other small insects to eat herself, they are not known to return prey back to the nest for feeding their offspring and it is believed that baby Toxeus magnus exclusively feed off of the milk-like substance produced by their mothers for the first three weeks of their lives before they start foraging themselves. After reaching sexual maturity, daughters (but not sons) are allowed to continue, while at this stage in their lives the continued consumption of this milk-like fluid is not exclusively necessary for survival. The offspring that consume it have higher chances of survival, since foraging outside their nest would increase the risk of predation.
This form of lactation may have evolved from production of .
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