Ordgarius magnificus

Ordgarius magnificus, the magnificent spider, is a bolas spider in the family Araneidae.[1] It is endemic to forests along the Australian east coast.

Ordgarius magnificus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Araneidae
Genus: Ordgarius
Species:
O. magnificus
Binomial name
Ordgarius magnificus
(Rainbow, 1897)

Description

Females are up to 14mm long and almost as wide; males reach only 2mm. Females are creamy-white with a pattern of pink and yellow spots on the abdomen, and a crown of white and reddish tubercles on the head.

Habits

They live in trees or tall shrubs, rarely less than 2m above the ground. The easiest way to find them is to search for clusters of large, brown egg-sacs suspended among foliage; the spider will be found nearby, at day sheltering in a retreat made from rolled leaves and silk.

Like all bolas spiders, the female attracts male moths with an airborne pheromone. Once a moth approaches, the spider senses it coming due to vibration sensitive hairs on its outstretched legs. It is then caught with a sticky globule that is flung at the prey.

The egg-sacs are up to 5 cm long; one spider produces up to nine sacs per season, each with several hundred eggs.

gollark: *My* consciousness is mostly a probabilistic anomaly so I'd be fine with the artifact.
gollark: Or did you just think 4sf was enough for the ad?
gollark: Also, is it precisely 1.312m or has it not been measured more accurately than that?
gollark: Oh bees did you actually work out the apioalgorithmoform?
gollark: The apiochronoformal artifact was in fact obliterated at the time and a GTechâ„¢ longitudinal stability field kept it from interfering when it reexisted.

References

  1. "Ordgarius magnificus". World Spider Catalog. Retrieved 16 August 2017.
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