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The field was full of these tiny webs on this dewy morning. Some were amorphous, others were structured, like this one. Didn't see any spiders.
Foggy mornings dew along Blackpoint Wildlife Drive in Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge.
More info: edrosack.com/2016/02/07/foggy-morning-start/
This spider is about 5 mm tall. It has woven it's web between a trash can and a woodshed. It is fascinating how filigree it has spun this web.
This was taken across the river in Blanche Marie. It was HUGE, spreading between the trees in jungle and visible only for short time as light was on it early in the morning.
All of the plants have gone to seed and on windy days are flying in the field, so it's easy to locate the spiders in their not so invisible webs.
In the garden now we have a few very small spiders, Mangora I think, that are spinning these little delicate webs. Pretty cool what they do in the sunlight...
Spider in its web (Argiope sp.; ID credit: Stefan Verheyen). Found in Niaouli forest reserve (near Attogon, South Benin, West Africa, 9th September 2022).
Fieldstack (tripod & manual macro slide, 64 exp.). Images assembled in Zerene Stacker (Pmax & Dmap). Sony A7R3 (cropped mode) + Metabones adapter + Canon EF-S 60mm 1:2.8 USM; ISO-400, f/3.5, 1/160s,-1step, natural light.