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08-26-15, 02:22 PM
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#16
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2014
Location: Victoria, TX
Age: 39
Posts: 774
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Re: What is this?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Minkness
So is the one in my pic possibly male seeing as it's small and brown?
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No, yours is female. To my knowledge (and I admit my knowledge about spiders is limited) male Orb Weavers don't build webs, they only seek out the females webs to breed. And usually get eaten in the process lol.
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08-26-15, 03:46 PM
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#17
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Member
Join Date: Oct-2013
Posts: 784
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Re: What is this?
Quote:
Originally Posted by FWK
No, yours is female. To my knowledge (and I admit my knowledge about spiders is limited) male Orb Weavers don't build webs, they only seek out the females webs to breed. And usually get eaten in the process lol.
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Immature males build webs for catching prey. Once males mature, food is no longer a concern for them, so they abandon their webs to search for the one thing that's on their minds and live until either they get eaten or starve to death.
That said, the one Minkness found is definitely female. Males, even if they aren't yet mature, won't have such fat abdomens. And mature males will have longer forelegs and bulbous pedipalps(although you can't see the pedipalps in that photo).
Quote:
nope nope nope nope nope nope nope nope
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I think we might need to start putting a "SPIDERS" warning in the subject line of threads containing spider photos.
__________________
0.1 tangerine albino honduran milksnake /// 0.1 snow southern pinesnake /// 0.1 black pinesnake /// 1.0 "hypo" north Mexican pinesnake (jani) /// 1.0 cincuate pinesnake (lineaticollis) /// 1.1 red striped gargoyle geckos /// 0.1 kitty cat /// 2.6.12 tarantulas(assorted species)
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08-26-15, 03:58 PM
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#18
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec-2014
Location: middle tn
Posts: 4,269
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Re: What is this?
Cool. Thanks for all the info everyone! =D
__________________
"THE Reptiholic"
I stopped counting at 30....
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08-26-15, 04:08 PM
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#19
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Member
Join Date: Oct-2013
Posts: 784
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Re: What is this?
I should note that what I said about gender was a generalization about orb weaving spiders and doesn't necessarily apply to other kinds of spiders! Here's an immature female Pelegrina aeneola (a species of jumping spider with no common name) who I recently caught at a family reunion. Once she matures, probably next spring, she'll get fatter. But in jumping spiders, the biggest difference between males and females is usually colour! Males of this species are almost entirely brown or black. Unfortunately sometimes males of one species may have similar colouration to females of another species, so it's important to know what species occur locally before trying to breed jumping spiders.
High five!
Sorry for the crappy phone pics; she's really tiny and fast!
__________________
0.1 tangerine albino honduran milksnake /// 0.1 snow southern pinesnake /// 0.1 black pinesnake /// 1.0 "hypo" north Mexican pinesnake (jani) /// 1.0 cincuate pinesnake (lineaticollis) /// 1.1 red striped gargoyle geckos /// 0.1 kitty cat /// 2.6.12 tarantulas(assorted species)
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08-26-15, 04:27 PM
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#20
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Member
Join Date: Dec-2014
Location: Sechelt
Posts: 608
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Re: What is this?
Omg i love that hi-five pic
(on my work comp sorry caps only here. Im not shouting)
__________________
13.16.1 Ball Python//1.0 O.P. Coxi//0.1 Salmon BCI//1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa//1.1 Bearded Dragon//0.1 Crested Gecko//0.1 Kenyan Sand Boa//1.0 Pet Rat//1.0 Leopard Gecko//1.0 Human
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08-26-15, 06:04 PM
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#21
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Member
Join Date: Mar-2014
Location: Victoria, TX
Age: 39
Posts: 774
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Re: What is this?
Quote:
Originally Posted by prairiepanda
Immature males build webs for catching prey. Once males mature, food is no longer a concern for them, so they abandon their webs to search for the one thing that's on their minds and live until either they get eaten or starve to death.
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Excellent, ty.
Quote:
Originally Posted by prairiepanda
I think we might need to start putting a "SPIDERS" warning in the subject line of threads containing spider photos.
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One would think, given that this is posted on the inverts subforum, that such a disclaimer would be unnecessary, even redundant. But then, I suppose irrational fears run deep, even with people who keep snakes.
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08-26-15, 07:41 PM
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#22
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Member
Join Date: Jul-2014
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 121
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Re: What is this?
The picture is that not great and it could be Larinioides cornutus the furrow spider or Neoscona crucifera the spotted orbweaver or barn spider.
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08-26-15, 11:59 PM
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#23
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Member
Join Date: Sep-2014
Posts: 1,252
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Re: What is this?
No clue about species name, but it looks similar to some orb weavers I've seen locally over the years. They would put up a new web each night, but I never saw them during the day, and the web would be completely gone in the morning. When something landed in the web the spider would quickly come out and wrap it in a cocoon with just a few rotations. Every other web-weaving spider I've seen that binds their prey simply use a single strand of web, but those produce an entire sheet.
__________________
7.6.26 Dominican red mountain boas, 1.1 carpet pythons, 3 ATB, 1.1 climacophora, 1.1 Russian rats, 1.1 prasina, 1.1 speckled kings, 3.3.1 corns, 1.1.1 black rats, 1.1 savu, 1.1 Stimson's, 1 spotted python, 1.1 Boiga nigriceps, 3 Olive house snakes, 1 Sonoran mountain king, 0.1 Sinoloan milk snake, 1.1 Dione rat snake.
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08-27-15, 07:04 AM
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#24
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Forum Moderator
Join Date: Dec-2014
Location: middle tn
Posts: 4,269
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Re: What is this?
Cool. =) i see it in the morning and the evening when I am comeing home or leaving for work, but not there to see if it's out during the actual day.
If it helps, I'm in middle TN.
__________________
"THE Reptiholic"
I stopped counting at 30....
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12-07-15, 04:47 AM
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#25
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Member
Join Date: Dec-2015
Location: Talala
Posts: 141
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Re: What is this?
Minkness I have a few of those where I live in Oklahoma. They are pretty cool to sit with a filtered red light. I just use a flashlight that has a red disk in it. They are awesome to watch feed.
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