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Spider at the range

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  • 05-29-2012, 12:36 AM
    Jonas@Balls2TheWall
    Spider at the range
    Was at the shooting range this weekend and found this cool spider crawling around. Picked it up with a target and took it somewhere with less traffic. I couldn't help but take a picture of it, It had the most beautiful colors! I have never seen one like this before, anyone know what its called? I am no spider expert but something about the way it looks screams "I am dangerous" ?????

    http://i918.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMAG0503.jpg
    http://i918.photobucket.com/albums/a...s/IMAG0504.jpg
  • 05-29-2012, 12:42 AM
    interloc
    We sure dont get stuff like that in Canada! Its awesome tho. Sorry I can't help you with a type.
  • 05-29-2012, 12:46 AM
    mues155
    I need to know where your from, there could be several different species, but to pinpoint an exact one, a location is a must.
  • 05-29-2012, 12:47 AM
    angllady2
    This spider reminds me of a link from my Facebook page. Maybe you'll like to look at it. It's from a spider forum, pages and pages of jumping spider pictures.

    http://www.arachnoboards.com/ab/show...ticidae-photos

    Gale
  • 05-29-2012, 12:58 AM
    kuppler
    Looks like a Jumping Spider to me....
  • 05-29-2012, 01:06 AM
    Jonas@Balls2TheWall
    Sorry peeps for some reason I though my location was on my avatar section. I am in Miami Florida.

    Angellady2: It does resemble the one you linked but the only difference I can see is the color and the furriness.
  • 05-29-2012, 01:13 AM
    angllady2
    How many pages did you look at ?

    I wasted about 2 hours looking at them all. :P I had no idea little bitty jumping spiders came in so many different colors and patterns.

    Gale
  • 05-29-2012, 01:42 AM
    Jonas@Balls2TheWall
    Re: Spider at the range
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by angllady2 View Post
    How many pages did you look at ?

    I wasted about 2 hours looking at them all. :P I had no idea little bitty jumping spiders came in so many different colors and patterns.

    Gale

    Woops I didnt notice there was more than 1 page, lol. Ill check it out again.
  • 06-16-2012, 06:35 AM
    shelliebear
    Looks like you've got yourself a Phidippus Regius, AKA Regal Jumping Spider. At first I thought it was a "Red Johnson Jumper/Phidippus Johnsoni" but the pattern did not match--those spiders are typically black on the back of their head, and your beautiful spider has red on her head! It appears that you have a female of the "orange" color variety. They're gorgeous, aren't they? The brighter colors are also very common in Florida.
    Jumping spiders are tricky to find. They're my favorite spider and sometimes I can't find -any- on a perfect day when I know they are out! They're fast, small, and blend in really well.
    I don't know how much you know about jumpers but they are NOT dangerous to people. In fact, most will "play" with you--put out your hand and see if your spider crawls on it! They're jumpers, so they will probably get excited and jump off your hand. They spin a drag thread before they jump in case they miss, and that way can pull themselves back up without injury. They're fun to play "hand over hand" with :)
    Typically they don't bite, unless handled roughly, squeezed, half smushed or if they feel trapped/in danger. The bite would hurt pretty good and swell a little but no worse than a bee sting, and you'd be fine.
    Spiders can have incredible colors without being dangerous to people. As they're so small they're really only adapted to be dangerous to bugs. :) We're nearly always fine after a spider tussle.
    Congrats on a gorgeous find. :)
  • 06-16-2012, 06:36 AM
    shelliebear
    Oh, forgot to include a link with some info for you:
    www.spiders.us is a fantastic ID site I frequent. They can give you an ID of your spider that will be pretty darn accurate, and for free! :D Plus there's awesome people over there. Take a look and post your photos if you like.
    Here's a site with some info on Regal jumpers:
    http://entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/...ing_spider.htm
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