Category: Nature Photography
Posted: October 17, 2012
Pages:
 ...11 -12- 13... 


Golden Orb Spiders

A chapter in the book Six star book

Dance Of The Spiders

by eileen0204 Interested in this? Contact The Artist

  You can own this. Offers accepted.     Information
Nephila spiders (Golden Orb) vary from reddish to greenish yellow in color with distinctive whiteness on the cephalothorax and the beginning of the abdomen. Like many species of the superfamily Araneoidea, they have striped legs specialized for weaving (where their tips point inward, rather than outward as is the case with many wandering spiders). Their contrast of dark brown/black and green/yellow allows warning and repelling of potential predators to whom their venom might be of little danger. Golden orb-weavers reach sizes of 4.8 - 5.1 cm (1.5 รข?? 2 in) in females, not including legspan, with males being usually 2/3 smaller (less than 2.5 cm, 1 in). The largest specimen ever recorded was a 6.9 cm (2.7 in) female N. clavipes (which is now debated to have been a new yet undocumented subspecies) from Queensland, that was able to catch and feed on a small-sized finch. In 2012 a large individual was photographed killing and consuming a half-meter-long brown tree snake in Freshwater, Queensland.[3][4] Species from Taiwan have been known to reach over 5.7 inches in mountainous country.[5] Golden silk orb-weavers are widespread in warmer regions throughout the world, with species in Australia, Asia, Africa (including Madagascar), and America. One species, N. clavipes, occurs in the United States of America, where it ranges throughout the coastal southeast and inland, from North Carolina to Texas. Nephila spiders are the oldest surviving genus of spiders, with a fossilized specimen known from 165 million years ago. these two were very large and close together. Sort of dancing with each other it seemed. They are everywhere in the gardens I attned often. Cropped and applied some lomo-ish than added vignette. 1/70s; f/3.1; ISO 200 using fujifilm digital
Post Type: Mixed Media Photography
Mixed Media: Medium | cropped, lomo-ish, added vignette

Recognized
Pays one point and 2 member cents.
Save to Favorites View Reviews Promote This Share or Bookmark

Dance Of The Spiders by eileen0204
You need to login or register to write reviews. It's quick! We only ask four questions to new members.