Image: Madelyn |
It's just... not on its face. This isn't one of your cutesy-wutesy jumping spiders, after all.
Image: Don Loarie Araneus gemma |
The smaller of the two species is Araneus gemma, where the females are usually scarcely more than a centimetre (0.4 in) long and the males slightly smaller. They tend to have a pale stripe on their abdomen who's length varies.
Image: Trappist_the_monk Araneus gemmoides |
This one has a short, pale stripe on the top of the cat's head which then splits into two and points at each of the ears. Males are about half the length of the female and much, much slimmer.
Image: stonebird A. gemma |
Image: B Staffan Lindgren A. gemmoides |
Image: stonebird A. gemma |
A. gemmoides, and maybe also A.gemma, are mostly nocturnal. They spend the daylight hours sheltering in a leaf or some other safe place near their web.
Image: stonebird A. gemma |
And if they don't have anything like that to do they'll sit in the middle of their web and snatch up any insects who get caught in their web. Still all about the web. Work, rest and play: INTERNET. I mean: WEB. Spiders were so ahead of their time.
Image: Linda Tanner Male and female A. gemma |
Video: A2daDD
And he might get eaten afterwards. Ho hum. It's called swings and roundabouts. What you gain on the swings, you lose on the roundabouts. Or else you fall off the swings and land in the crocodile infested pool beneath. Fun while it lasted.
The female stores the male's sperm as her eggs grow and develop. She'll become increasingly egg-shaped herself as she gets plumper and plumper before fertilizing her eggs.
She's at her most rotund in the autumn months before she finally lays her eggs and wraps them all up in an egg sac. She soon dies, leaving her eggs to overwinter.
Image: B Staffan Lindgren Spiderlings! |
So ahead of their time.
not sure i see a cat's face in that...
ReplyDeleteVery much not an octokitten, yes!
ReplyDeleteI was briefly thinking they'd be more appropriate as cat butt spider, but I quickly realize that could be taken completely the wrong way, and that spider would look really different.
@TexWisGirl: It's just under the ears :P
ReplyDelete@Lear's Fool: Haha! I don't want to see THAT spider!
My cat face is on my front semi enclosed deck. We ALL love her, her name is 'big Bertha' as she's really big, and bright orange. She does things her way, not the way she's 'supposed' to, according to experts. She usually hangs out head down in the center of her web, all day long! She doesn't 'hide' in daylight, as it's said they'll do. Mine would 'go against the grain' as I've always done!!! Lol!!!
ReplyDeleteOne worry I have is that 'mud daubers' around here will paralyse these beautiful spiders, and incorporate their live bodies into there nests!!!! The horror! 😡 So, I now worry about her, on top of everything else in life!!! Ha! Nature is one continual reality show, the best there is...🕷🐞🐝🐜
My Cat face doesn't hide anymore. She started out on the back of a stove we had in the barn but it got moved inside, she stayed in the barn and hangs out on a clothes line bold as you please.
DeleteHahaa! You got the beginnings of a soap opera there!
ReplyDeleteHundreds of babys.
ReplyDeleteI'm from Burns Oregon and we have SO many of these spiders. They're scary looking but beautiful and harmless. They just hang out and quietly do their own thing. I've always loved them and glad to have them around.
ReplyDeleteSo, here is my question! If the web is not scientifically correctly made, is it still functional to snare “food”?
ReplyDelete