Gladicosa gulosa

Gladicosa gulosa is a type of wolf spider found in Beech-Maple forests of the US and Canada, where the spider can be found in the plant strata of ground, herb or shrub. It is not one of the more common wolf spiders.[2]

Gladicosa gulosa
Gladicosa gulosa from Green Ridge State Forest, Flintstone, Maryland
Gladicosa gulosa near Leesville, Louisiana
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Lycosidae
Genus: Gladicosa
Species:
G. gulosa
Binomial name
Gladicosa gulosa
Synonyms[1]
  • Lycosa gulosa Walckenaer, 1837
  • Leimonia gulosa (Walckenaer, 1837)
  • Lycosa kochii Emerton, 1885
  • Lycosa nigraurata Montgomery, 1902
  • Lycosa purcelli Montgomery, 1902
  • Trochosa purcelli (Montgomery, 1902)
  • Varacosa gulosa (Walckenaer, 1837)

Life cycle

This spider is nocturnal and hides during the day.[3] It makes no web or shelter of any kind and hides under leaves in the day.[3] The female carries its eggs in a spherical sac until they hatch, after which the spiderlings may ride on the female until able to fend for themselves.[3]

gollark: But generally you can't.
gollark: I think there might be exceptions for "learn to program" apps and stuff.
gollark: You can't because they don't allow you to ship runtime-loadable code.
gollark: But what if my app needs 85TB of RAM to work?
gollark: Which is probably because of consumer apioidness and its origins in the telecoms world rather than the computing one.

References

  1. "Taxon details Gladicosa gulosa (Walckenaer, 1837)", World Spider Catalog, Natural History Museum Bern, retrieved 2016-04-10
  2. Elliot 1930
  3. National Audubon Society Field Guide to Insects and Spiders. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 898. ISBN 0-394-50763-0.
  • Elliot, F.R. (1930). An ecological study of the spiders of the beech-maple forest. The Ohio Journal of Science, 30(1): 1-22. Retrieved March 29, 2007 from Ohio State Knowledge Bank. Article


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.