THE COLORS ARE SO VIBRANT
(Cw: CLOSE up of a centipede, centipede eating cricket, no videos tho)
Monterey Bay Aquarium
Three Goblin Art

oozey mess
trying on a metaphor
NASA
occasionally subtle

titsay
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
AnasAbdin

#extradirty
Cosmic Funnies
Keni
almost home
Acquired Stardust
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

Discoholic 🪩

pixel skylines
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Mike Driver
art blog(derogatory)
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@chimerarachnid
THE COLORS ARE SO VIBRANT
(Cw: CLOSE up of a centipede, centipede eating cricket, no videos tho)
this is my current favorite photo of Bellatrix taking a quick lil evening peek out of her burrow. i’m happy about every single pic of her since she’s usually always underground and i’m keeping a terrarium full of dirt as a pet. basically.
0.1 Aphonopelma seemanni “blue”
a small price to pay for Snail Table, in my opinion
every house needs a snable
cute bird..
The Rainbow Jumping Spider: this flamboyant species of jumping spider has a stunning, almost rainbow-like appearance, and it was once believed to be extinct
The scientific name of this species is Chrysilla volupe, but it's also known as the rainbow jumping spider, because the males are covered in colorful, iridescent patterns that include shades of red, pink, purple, blue, green, and gold.
Above: the male form of Chrysilla volupe
These may be the world's most flamboyant spiders.
Above: Chrysilla volupe males
Despite its eye-catching appearance, Chrysilla volupe is regarded as a rare species, and it's often very difficult to find.
The male form of Chrysilla volupe was first described by scientists in 1879, but very few of these spiders were documented in the years that followed, leading some researchers to believe that the species may have gone extinct.
Above: another male of the same species
The female form wasn't even identified until 139 years later, when several female specimens were finally discovered in the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary in Kerala, India. That discovery was made back in 2018.
Above: the female form of Chrysilla volupe
The females also have iridescent patterns, but their colors are much more subdued. Their heads are decorated with patches of red and grayish-blue setae; the spider's abdomen is also covered in shimmering flecks of blue, gold, pink, and purple. Unlike the males, the females do not have colorful patterns on their legs.
Above: a lateral view of the male
Like most jumping spiders, this species is quite small -- the males have a maximum length of just 5.4mm (that measurement includes their outstretched legs) and the females are even smaller, measuring just 2.6mm long, which is roughly the size of a flea.
Above: Chrysilla volupe standing on a lizard's head
Chrysilla volupe has been documented at sites throughout India, Nepal, Bhutan, and Sri Lanka.
Above: a rainbow jumping spider with a dewdrop on his head
I wrote a post about this species a few years ago, but it recently occurred to me that some of the info in that original post may have been inaccurate, so I decided to just go back and rewrite the whole thing.
I also added more info, sources, and photos.
Above: a male Chrysilla volupe snacking on a fruit fly
Sources & More Info:
Journal of Entomology and Zoology Studies: Chrysilla volupe Spider Spotted in Eastern Ghats, India (PDF)
Arthropoda Selecta: First Description of the Female of Chrysilla volupe from India, with Notes on the Species' Distribution and Life History
Biodiversity Data Journal: The Genera Chrysilla and Phintelloides Revisited
The Hindu: Rare Chrysilla volupe Spiders Discovered at Puttenahalli Lake
Peckhamia: New Records of Jumping Spiders from Nepal
Curly antennae hehe
The colors are so pretty 🥹 kinda like a bee lol-
(insectguru on instagram, photo by bensamuel86)
look at my newest addition, he’s so tiny and pretty. 0.0.1 Pamphobeteus sp. platyomma
Magnolia Green Jumping Spider (Lyssomanes viridis)
Observed by mvicentinr, CC BY-NC
cute bird..
Hartford Courant, Connecticut, March 9, 1906
One thing im uncomfortably woke about is bugs. And im actively trying to get more uncomfortably woke. By this i mean i DO believe the normalised fear of bugs stems from both government and business propaganda. The start of household pesticide sales coinciding with the boom in insect related horror movies. The promotion of anti intellectualism and anti enviromentalism. If you're scared of bugs, you wont care about saving them. If you dont care about saving them, you wont care about saving our home, since without bugs it cannot be saved. If you dont care about saving our home, the rich can do whatever they want with the chunks of it they continue to destroy.
I WILL calmly and kindly try to help anyone who is afraid of bugs. I will show them my finds, i will explain their importance, i will tell them just how sweet and gentle and friendly they are. And I WILL shoot down any immature loser who believes senseless killing is the only possible response to not liking something.
Get woke. Love bugs.
Hornet Moth (Sesia apiformis)
Also known as the Hornet Clearwing, the hornet moth is no hornet but a species of sesiid moth that is native to the British Isles, Germany, Holland, and Austria (it has also been introduced to North America). This species is quite similar to the Lunar Hornet Moth (S.bembeciformis) but is distinguished by its yellow head and shoulders and black collar. Like the lunar hornet moth S.apiformis will overwinter as a larvae once or twice and adults will fly from June to July and sometimes August. Adults are often seen on poplar trees as these are their larval food plant.
Phylogeny
Animalia-Arthropoda-Insecta-Lepidoptera-Sesiidae-Sesia-S.apiformis
Images: Ab H.Baas and Gyorgy Csoka
A pair of marbled salamanders (Ambystoma opacum) in North Florida, USA
by Alex Roukis
This noble weevil | source
Today’s echinoderm is Pawsonia saxicola, commonly known as the sea gherkin.
Image source: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/96234509