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Home Home » GENERA P » Pteronia » Pteronia fasciculata and crab spider
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Pteronia fasciculata and crab spider

Pteronia fasciculata and crab spider
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  • Pteronia
  • Pteronia fasciculata
  • Pteronia fasciculata and crab spider
  • Pteronia fasciculata flowerhead cluster
  • Pteronia fasciculata nestled in rocky abode
  • Pteronia fasciculata presenting a leafy top
  • Pteronia fasciculata stem-tip flowerhead
  • Pteronia fasciculata, the paraffienbos
  • Pteronia flexicaulis
  • Pteronia flexicaulis blunt leaf-tips
  • Pteronia flexicaulis dry flowerhead
  • Pteronia glauca
  • Pteronia glauca anchored at some branch tips
  • Pteronia glauca flowering
  • Pteronia glauca old stem
  • Pteronia incana
  • Pteronia incana buds

Image information

Description

The channelled, ascending leaves of Pteronia fasciculata seen here, yellowed by a long dry summer, are sessile (stalkless), overlapping on the stem. Their margins are ciliate; the fringe of tiny, short hairs bears comparison to eyelashes.

The spider settled in among the leaves may not have picked such a good spot for making a living. It appears to be quite dead. White spiders are often crab spiders, but some dead ones may turn ghost-like. (Comment added as a service to the suggestible ones keen to believe way out, unproven stuff).

Crab spiders come in different colours like blue, white and yellow, able to blend with their surroundings. They have legs of different shapes and sizes, the front legs bigger than the back ones, making them crab spiders. There are the usual eight legs of members of the spider family, but in their case also eight eyes that will spot you.

Crab spiders are harmless to people. They hunt pollinating insects. The family of Thomisidae that includes them comprises about 3000 species (www.africansnakebiteinstitute.com; https://badpests.com).

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232
Photographer
Thabo Maphisa
Author
Ivan Latti
 
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