Foto comparativa del palpo con el de arachno.piwigo.
Araña lobo “manchada”, probablemente de la especie Rabidosa rabida de la familia Lycosidae, observada en Sierra de Lobos, en predios participantes del proyecto "Restauración y cosecha de agua en Sierra de Lobos" del Instituto de Ecología del Estado, financiado por Volkswagen de México S.A. de C.V. Ayuda por favor para identificar la especie.
Found 3 together on dead leaf in a Bush. Jumping spider is very quick and not as shy as other spiders.
Extremely vibrant color with 4 large eyes in front and 2 on back of head unlike other spiders I have seen.
Please help Mr identity this sider
Fast and elusive. I saw quite a few of these, but didn't get any decent shots until this, my second day trying ... Approx. 4mm.
What a cool find! An uncommonly observed species, probably due to the size. This adult male is a bit over 1.5mm - females are not much bigger. Photographed here on my arm as I was bringing it inside to put in a vial.
While I could not quite get the right angle in the photo, the palp is a good match for the drawings in Levi 1957 and I think you can see enough here to make a reasonable comparison. The other characters also match Levi's description nicely.
I may eventually take this specimen to the UT labs where they have better equipment to examine/photograph it. So, ID is tentative but reasonable I think. Type locality (Llano, Texas) is about 100km NW from here.
For project admins: I believe this to be the first live photos of the male of this species.
Slow-moving stream bank
@ Wild Basin Wilderness Preserve
never seen this little guy
No live photos available; ID determined from specimen by Ken Schneider, who also provided the Z-stacked specimen images (copyright California Academy of Sciences). Images also posted to Bug Guide - https://bugguide.net/node/view/2190050
Ranch
On Aloysia gratissima
Could be theridiidae though? I got nothing. About 2mm size. Reminds me of a tiny wagneriana.
Looks sorta Holcencyrtus-esque! A little over 2mm long.
The beetle numbers and diversity was fantastic on this warm, still, muggy night.
This was my favorite.
Det. A.D. Smith 2004
coll'ed by J.C. Abbott, via Malaise Trap set: 15.IV to 7.V.2004
spmn in the UTIC, Austin, TX
It's back! The same mutant beetle. :-)
cuuuuute!!
Was observed eating a dewdrop spider in the web of a golden silk orbweaver
BOLD-XB1
First 6 photos are as found on observation date. Last 5 photos are after molt. Spider is immature in all photos.
On the railing of the boardwalk
Long legs, dark brown body with little to no markings, perhaps VERY light stripes on the thorax side-to-side, not complete. looks ant-like.
Front part is larger than abdomen. Large visible fangs, small but visible spinnerets.
Front photo with shine is with flash, slightly truer color. Most taken with soft white lighting.
I have no idea what this one is, it's very shy, didn't like UV light.
Two pairs of Autumn Meadowhawks were ovipositing near the shoreline when out of nowhere the spider ambushed the one pair. The wings of the dragonfly are visible on the water surface beneath the spider.
Female
UVIVF
Sorry It flew away after I took this picture. I couldn't take a picture with normal light
non-typical form, most red pigment replaced by black
high-elevation, open ground, low herbs, sage; early in season, few adult males
4 pairs of legs, cephalothorax and abdomen, pedipalps
Assuming that this odd creature is a beetle, the elytra are very thin and do not fit together down the midline. And when alive, its motions were like that of a fly or wasp walking around.
The tiny beetle club is my collection of beetles 3 mm or smaller: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations?verifiable=any&place_id=any&field:Similar%20observation%20set=Tiny%20beetle%20club%20(%3C%3D%203%20mm%20long)
A scrappy expanse of silky refuges and capture webs littered with body parts of previous victims. When preferred prey is entangled, the female spiders emerge from their 'nests' and overpower it by grabbing its extremities. In this case, a wasp https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9319446.
Presumably they inject venom because after a minute or so the prey stops struggling. Then they snip it out of the web and carry it into one of several 'nests' or refuges.
Unwanted prey, often beetles (see https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9319435 ) are also killed but sometimes left in the web, uneaten. Ants, in this case, Maranoplus ( https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/9319390 )scavenge around the periphery of the webs, feasting on unwanted beetles or other left-overs.
Reddish narrow spider
Observations from a trip to the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas, October 2006.
Wild Olive Tortoise Beetle - Physonota alutacea (large larvae, 10-12 mm)
bugguide.net/node/view/8350
These bizarre creatures were found on their host plant, Wild Olive (Cordia boissieri - Boraginaceae), a small native tree. BugGuide says that "undisturbed" adults are silvery, but all those I saw had a mostly transparent covering. Larvae are bizarre segmented creatures that remind me of trilobites. They have tail-like appendages that resemble the fleshy appendages of some caterpillars, so I wonder if they are mimics.
This observation is for the prey. Brown widow with prey. Possibly Ghost spider - Anyphaena pacifica. And possibly the ghost spider has prey possibly Case-bearing moth - Phereoeca uterella?????????
You can see why they are called fishing spiders! A minnow for lunch!
Found it stuck in the lid of our kettle