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Shot this at my secret garden in the West.
The Lawn Wolf Spider builds the familiar sheet-webs that sparkle with dew drops over grassy grounds at dawn. Most Wolf Spiders hunt on the ground.
Newly hatched spiderlings can sometimes be seen riding on the back of their mother.The spiderlings apparently do not feed while on the mother's back, surviving on the remains of their yolk.
The eyes are in three rows comprising a front row of four small eyes, and a median and back row of two larger eyes each.
(Extracted from "A Guide to Common Singapore Spiders" by Joseph K. H. Koh)
This little guy was on the wall to my office building one morning when I was heading into work, so I took a quick hand-held shot of him (or her).
"In the chill of night [?_?], at the scene of the crime"
Acho q nem preciso falar.. aeaeuhauiea
É uma aranha.. a espreita...
This guy (or girl) only comes out once in while from its deep hiding area inside one of the outside lights. It's a fairly large one too (considering how small our BC Garden Orb spiders are), but the moment it is out of its hiding spot, I have to be quick and only ever get 1 frame before it scurries back up its web.
This small spider hardly 7 millimetres big decided to make it's home on my patio burner. Lets hope the weather stays warm or it's toast for this chappy.
Another view of this net casting spider in the garden. Using a low point of view I was able to include the net and its huge eyes in the same view.
On the top-right corner of an american $1 bill, sitting on the frame around the giant '1' is a spider -- Presumably the one who made the webwork all over the bill.
Taken with a Sigma 18-200mm zoom lens at 200mm and three stacked extension tubes (65mm total)