View allAll Photos Tagged orbweaver
I've seen this spider for weeks in my front yard. It builds its web every night. I don't know how long spiders live but I will miss it.
Now, this is pretty amazing. Check out the fine detail in this orbweaver spider. This was lit by a studio strobe at about an 85 degree angle to the camera, triggered by a shoe-mount PC cord. The spider takes up less than a 400x400 pixel area on the APS-C sensor, but stillso much amazingly fine detail is illuminated! 1/1600 at F/8 ISO 100. (I cropped the edges of this frame a bit to eliminate a lot of empty space in the image to speed up load time.)
Orb Weavers come out when it is dark but hide from the sun. This lady made a home in the wind chimes.
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A fly is caught in an Orbweaver's web. The fly helps to show the size of the Orbweaver. The colors on the orchard are what make it so appealing and so recognizable. Its legs are a bright green and its abdomen brown on the underside has an amazing pattern of yellow, black, green and white stripes on its top, almost in a marble painted pattern. The photo gives a partial view of this pattern.
I'm in my hammock, enjoying my breakfast! Nah, actually, we found this cute lil orb weaver at night so supper is more appropriate. Pahang, Malaysia.
More tropical spiders: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2012/01/tropical-spiders.html
This spider looks like it is suspended in space but if you look carefully you can see the web. It's lit from behind so you can see through it.
Nocturnal orbweaver spider, Larinioides patagiatus, at Bear Creek Nature Center, Colorado Springs, Colorado. April 26, 2019.
Araneidae
Body length: 4 mm
Early morning stack of a tiny orb weaver. It seems inactive but note how it's monitoring any "web activity" by keeping its highly sensitive feet on the silk.
Stacked from 42 natural light exposures in Zerene stacker.
View larger!
Tiny little orb weaver, sitting pretty on the bush peas after some rain. Found in the mid Blue Mountains, NSW.
Arboreal Orbweaver (Neoscona crucifera).
Cedar Hill State Park. Cedar Hill, Texas.
Dallas County. 21 October 2019.
Nikon D7500. AF-S VR Micro-Nikkor 105mm f/2.8G IF-ED.
f/11 @ 1/400 sec. ISO 4000.
Part of the "Bugs on My Porch" series.
This sucker is huge! She's pretty cool. As a nocturnal spider, she sets up her web every night in the same spot on my porch and tears it down at roughly the same time every morning. Rinse and repeat. She's probably doubled in size since June.
Spiny orbweaver spider (Gasteracantha cancriformis) is a species of spider with prominent spines on their abdomen.
Total length about 2 mm. It's only October 8 and I'm running low on spider photos. Often I can scramble to find some around, but this year there's not much going on. It was a dry winter last year and perhaps bug populations suffered. Or maybe I'm just making excuses for not catching all the spiders I could back in the spring and summer.