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DPChallenge Forums >> General Discussion >> Warning: Close-up Spider Photo!
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08/25/2005 05:12:01 PM · #1
This guy was hanging out on my patio the other night. I was woundering if anybody could identify him/her and if he/she is venomous. It's about 2 1/4" from tip of one leg to the tip of the other and was out and about at night here at my house in Gilbert Arizona.

Thanks,
Roger



Message edited by author 2005-08-25 17:13:07.
08/25/2005 05:12:37 PM · #2


You only need the image id.

Message edited by author 2005-08-25 17:12:57.
08/25/2005 05:14:09 PM · #3
Thanks
08/25/2005 05:15:29 PM · #4
Cool spider. You need just a tad more DOF to get him completely in focus. (the tips of the legs are OOF)
08/25/2005 05:24:18 PM · #5
Looks like a wolf spider

Edit: Added link

Message edited by author 2005-08-25 17:25:55.
08/25/2005 05:26:12 PM · #6
i think it might of the dead variety - at least if in my yard...


08/25/2005 05:34:13 PM · #7
This is my close up Spider Photo. A Wolf Spider from Virginia.

08/25/2005 05:35:27 PM · #8
Originally posted by DJLuba:

This is my close up Spider Photo. A Wolf Spider from Virginia.



He needs a shave.
08/25/2005 05:37:51 PM · #9
Originally posted by DJLuba:

This is my close up Spider Photo. A Wolf Spider from Virginia.



How cute is she!!!
I had a little boy wolf running around on me last night but he wouldnt stay still long enough for me to get a good face shot.
08/25/2005 05:50:15 PM · #10


i had a male wolf hanging out on my big toe last night.
yup, we dont take pleasure in killing spiders in this household.
08/25/2005 05:51:50 PM · #11
Yeah, that's a wolf spider. Oddly enough, we have them here in Mesa, too.

I had a couple hanging out in my bedroom for quite some time. They finally vanished...no idea where to. Of course I named them Wolfram & Hart. I could almost tell them apart.

Previously I named a wolf spider Lucky Sevven because he was short one leg. Why Sevven and not Seven? I dunno. It just seemed right.
08/25/2005 06:05:06 PM · #12
Originally posted by DJLuba:

This is my close up Spider Photo. A Wolf Spider from Virginia.



What a cute face! We name our spiders too. Always have a huntsman spider in the house to eat the really dangerous ones. And if we see a dangerous one like a redback or white tail I just relocate it outside far away.
08/25/2005 06:47:29 PM · #13
What a refreshing thread. No squished ones.

Originally posted by ldowse:

Looks like a wolf spider



The spider the OP asked about is a wolf spider it looks like, but not the one pictured in your link, which looks to be a Rabid Wolf Spider or Lycosa rabida. That would be the same species as the one Mesmeraj has posted.



I'm not really sure of the full ID of the OP image, as there are many species of Wolf Spiders in the AZ area. It is a species in the Geolycosa family.



Message edited by author 2005-08-25 18:48:50.
08/26/2005 04:06:13 AM · #14
... and to answer the other question, yes it is poisonous (most spiders are) -- but not usually dangerous. They are not generally aggressive (witness the one on the toe), but their bite can be quite painful -- and if you are overly alergic to the venom, can become more serious.

This is all I remember from my search last fall for information on the brown recluse -- which they are often mistaken for, but is no where near as troublesome.

David
08/26/2005 05:26:55 AM · #15
One from my files.. Extreme close-up, very shallow DOF but this little guy was only about 10mm (1cm) in size. Taken with the 18-55 kit lens reversed and off-camera flash.

08/26/2005 05:28:57 PM · #16
Originally posted by Britannica:

... and to answer the other question, yes it is poisonous (most spiders are) -- but not usually dangerous. They are not generally aggressive (witness the one on the toe), but their bite can be quite painful -- and if you are overly alergic to the venom, can become more serious.

This is all I remember from my search last fall for information on the brown recluse -- which they are often mistaken for, but is no where near as troublesome.

David

Thanks for the information. I was worried that it may be a brown recluse. I am familiar with the wolf spiders in the other photos but this one looks different. I don't want to kill harmless spiders but from what I have read, the brown recluse is not something you want to share your home with.
08/26/2005 06:54:44 PM · #17
Originally posted by marksimms:

One from my files.. Extreme close-up, very shallow DOF but this little guy was only about 10mm (1cm) in size. Taken with the 18-55 kit lens reversed and off-camera flash.



I know it's been said before ....but ....
where, what brand, cost do ya'll use for mounting canon lens reversed?
09/06/2005 05:01:38 PM · #18
Hi, sorry about the delay in replying. Basically just bought a reverse mount off eBay, paid about £5 (UKP) for it, about $9 (USD). Not sure of the make, its plain black (with red alignment dot). Sorry I cant be of much more help, can't take photo of rig either due to only one digi camera in the house.
09/06/2005 09:21:54 PM · #19
Originally posted by rcrawford:

Originally posted by Britannica:

... and to answer the other question, yes it is poisonous (most spiders are) -- but not usually dangerous. They are not generally aggressive (witness the one on the toe), but their bite can be quite painful -- and if you are overly alergic to the venom, can become more serious.

This is all I remember from my search last fall for information on the brown recluse -- which they are often mistaken for, but is no where near as troublesome.

David

Thanks for the information. I was worried that it may be a brown recluse. I am familiar with the wolf spiders in the other photos but this one looks different. I don't want to kill harmless spiders but from what I have read, the brown recluse is not something you want to share your home with.


Brown recluse spiders have a sleeker looking body with a bulbous abdomen. The underside of the spider has a marking which looks like a violin, the neck of it pointing towards the abdomen. They also have six eyes that are in pairs on it's head.





Hope that helps. And I didn't take those photos.

09/06/2005 09:28:21 PM · #20
Originally posted by rcrawford:

This guy was hanging out on my patio the other night. I was woundering if anybody could identify him/her and if he/she is venomous. It's about 2 1/4" from tip of one leg to the tip of the other and was out and about at night here at my house in Gilbert Arizona.

Thanks,
Roger



Yeah...isn't it a wolf spider or a 'huntsman' as we call them down here!
09/06/2005 10:15:53 PM · #21
I found a beautiful yellow and black spider near a wetlands area this weekend, turned out he was very common. Some kind of garden spider.

09/06/2005 10:30:09 PM · #22
A great site to identify spiders and just get freaked out at the pictures is //www.spiderzrule.com/web.htm
Here's one of mine though.


Message edited by author 2005-10-28 21:23:35.
09/06/2005 10:51:40 PM · #23
Uhhh, gives me the creepie crawlies just looking at it. My apt in San Francisco was infested with wolf spiders a few years ago... literally dozens of them and they'd come out at night. My roommate got bit twice while sleeping... large red painful bites. I had two close calls, one spider was in my bed with me one night and one spider crawled into my water glass... luckily I turned on the light before drinking. I HATE spiders!
09/06/2005 11:20:35 PM · #24
Hey rich. How big was that spider? It looks a lot like a spider we have in a lot of places around here in Taiwan. Ours is about the size of a fairly large hand extended all the way. Some friends and I went for a walk and found a nifty little temple up on some hillock and there was a whole bunch of these guys. One strand of the web was knocked by my head, but did not break, it just slid up and over my forehead and hair and down my back. Stronger than steel? Hell yeah. Big spiders.

Sometimes they like to get in houses in rural areas and I have heard they are fairly poisonous, probably more because of the quantity of the venom rather than the strength though would be my guess. They aren't aggressive though.

The biggest spider we have in these parts is too hard to take pictures of. It is nocturnal and likes to make REALLY big webs in the tops of trees in the mountains. I have seen webs that have spanned 20 or 30 feet. I have a pic of a smaller one here: //pg.photos.yahoo.com/ph/eschelar/detail?.dir=7696&.dnm=6f85.jpg&.src=ph.

That spider may not have been the same kind as another biggie I saw once in the mountains on a day I didn't have my camera with me. It was about as big around as a dinner plate, maybe 20% bigger than my face. It had a bulbous abdoment in a dark irridescent green. I would say a pigeon would be on the extreme end of it's dinner menu given a one on one fight...
09/06/2005 11:26:09 PM · #25
Originally posted by rich:

I found a beautiful yellow and black spider near a wetlands area this weekend, turned out he was very common. Some kind of garden spider.


I've got a few shots like that in my portfolio too:

Gotta love those great big garden spiders, huh?
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