Thread: Crab Spiders
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Old 03-06-2004, 07:06 PM
paghat
 
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Default Crab Spiders

They're so cute, these crab spiders. For three days in a row I've been
watching a white one that lives in white thimbleberry flower. Today her
blossom-house is all wilted, & no more prey is apt to come to her there.
There are fresh thimbleberry flowers right next to her flower-house, but
she hasn't yet figured out she should move next door. Couple days ago she
caught a really big pollinating fly, & held onto it for two days in her
big pinchers, & yesterday I was lucky enough to see her carry the husk to
the edge of her house & throw it away.

Crab spiders or flower-spiders take two or three days to turn the same
color as the flower they lurk in, so pollinators can't see them. They
don't make webs. I remember my great-grampa's cornrows of dahlias had
bright blue & bright orange & bright red crab spiders waiting in the
blooms to ambush pollinators. But the most common ones can turn only
shades from white to yellow, & if you put one in a flower the color of
which they can't match, they leave to find a white or yellow flower.

When lurking in flowers & being color-coordinated, I find them so
attractive & appealing. Not all crab spiders ambush from flowers, though,
& sometimes a particularly big one that lives on the ground, running
sideways with its front pincers raised above its head, scares the
bejabbers out of me. They have great eye-sight & wave their pinchers
threateningly, which is kind of weird, tiny little thing threatening to do
me in if I don't go away. But the flower spiders are always quite small &
pretty & sit perfectly still waiting for prey, they seem pretty sure
they're invisible & never act threatened even while being watched.

This morning when I saw this one's house had wilted, I touched the outside
of a wilted petal, & the ivory white spider ran to the front of the flower
to see if there was something to catch. I almost took it out of the wilted
flower to put in a fresh one, but I suppose it'll soon enough figure that
out without my help.

I tried to get a picture of it:
http://www.paghat.com/images/thimble...pider_june.jpg

--
"Of what are you afraid, my child?" inquired the kindly teacher.
"Oh, sir! The flowers, they are wild," replied the timid creature.
-from Peter Newell's "Wild Flowers"
Visit the Garden of Paghat the Ratgirl: http://www.paghat.com