Prey capture techniques T. plumipes spins a relatively permanent web. They capture most of their prey during the day. This diurnal preying schedule is due to the fact that
T. plumipes captures mostly
Hymenoptera, which are more abundant during the day than the night. Both sexes build webs for prey capture. The size of the web and the web location affects resource acquisition.
Silk color The silks produced by
T. plumipes could be classified as both bee visible and bee invisible. The bee visible silks appear yellow or golden to the human eye, while the bee invisible silks are white/silver to the human eye. The colors of the silk are not related to spider's
protein intake. The yellow coloration of
T. plumipes silk is not due to
carotinoid intake from the food. The silk colors are correlated with silk thermal properties rather than silk protein structure. The conspicuous yellow coloration of
T. plumipes silk is selectively attractive to certain prey species, but it might also attract the predators. The yellow and white coloration of
T. plumipes silk might be the result of trade-offs between prey and predator attraction. The balance of this trade-off determines if
T. plumipes silk is visible to bees or not.
Food storage T. plumipes incorporate prey they previously captured into their webs. They apply a long-term storage mechanism. They incorporate a densely packed storage band of previously captured uneaten prey into their web that is attached to the barrier web near the hub. They can maintain their body mass when there is low level of prey capture by eating the stored items.
T. plumipes incorporate only animal material in their storage, but some other species in the
Trichonephila genus utilize plant material in the storage serving some unidentified non-food-storing functions. A disadvantage of hoarding behavior is that the prey items stored may be lost to kleptoparasites or through web damage. Spiders in the genus
Trichonephila are often host to
kleptoparasitic spiders. Food storage in the web can attract more kleptoparasites. However, a study showed that the abundance of kleptoparasites does not affect
T. plumipes weight gain. Kleptoparasites feed on prey items ignored by the host spider, which does not affect the nutrients intake of the host spider. ==Mating==