Just a busy, little furry friend very hard at work.
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from United Arab Emirates

seen from Italy
seen from Türkiye

seen from Australia
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from Sweden
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from Romania

seen from India
seen from United Kingdom
Just a busy, little furry friend very hard at work.
A green huntsman spider (Micrommata virescens) in Sourbrodt, Belgium
by Frank Vassen
🕷️┊Tfa arachnida [lazy art]
I'm drawing a comic from my tfa au, so catch it. The idea came from my head.
Ornamental Wandering Spider (Viridasius fasciatus)
Observed by liuye, CC BY-NC
Olios menghaiensis
A species of huntsman spider found in Laos, Thailand, and China.
image by jiangyou
I was in the mood for some bug doodles
Feel free to give suggestions for more
Round 3 - Arachnida - Araneae
(Sources - 1, 2, 3, 4)
Order: Araneae
Common Name: “spiders”
Families: 137 - Liphistiidae (“segmented spiders”), Heptathelidae (“primitive spiders”), Hexurellidae (“micro dwarf tarantulas”), Mecicobothriidae (“dwarf tarantulas”), Atypidae (“purseweb spiders”), Megahexuridae (“Tawny Dwarf Tarantula”), Antrodiaetidae (“folding trapdoor spiders”), Ischnothelidae (“zebra curtain-web spiders”), Microhexuridae (“pygmy funnel-web spiders”), Hexathelidae (Hexathelid “funnel-web spiders”), Euagridae (“spiny curtain-web spiders”), Porrhothelidae (“tunnelweb spiders”), Macrothelidae (“northern tunnel spiders”), Paratropididae (“bald-legged spiders”), Stasimopidae (“horned trapdoor spiders”), Atracidae (Atracid “funnel-web spiders”), Actinopodidae (“mouse spiders”), Halonoproctidae (Halonoproctid “trapdoor spiders”), Migidae (“tree trapdoor spiders”), Idiopidae (“spiny trapdoor spiders”), Ctenizidae (“cork-lid trapdoor spiders”), Euctenizidae (“wafer-lid trapdoor spiders”), Bemmeridae (“Afrasian wishbone spiders”), Barychelidae (“brushed trapdoor spiders”), Theraphosidae (“tarantulas”), Nemesiidae (“tubetrapdoor spiders” and “wishbone spiders”), Pycnothelidae (“open-holed trapdoor spiders”), Dipluridae (“curtain-web spiders”), Cyrtaucheniidae (also “wafer-lid trapdoor spiders”), Rhytidicolidae (“golden tunnel-web spiders”), Anamidae (“wishbone spiders”), Entypesidae (“African open-hole spiders”), Microstigmatidae,
Hypochilidae (“lampshade spiders”), Filistatidae (“crevice weavers”), Caponiidae (“orange lungless spiders”), Diguetidae (“coneweb spiders”), Drymusidae (“false violin spiders”), Oonopidae (“goblin spiders”), Orsolobidae, Pacullidae, Periegopidae (“wide-claw spiders”), Pholcidae (“cellar spiders”), Plectreuridae, Scytodidae (“spitting spiders”), Segestriidae (“tunnel spiders”), Sicariidae (“recluse spiders”), Tetrablemmidae (“armored spiders”), Trogloraptoridae, Leptonetidae (“cave spiders”), Archoleptonetidae, Ochyroceratidae (“midget ground weavers”), Psilodercidae (“long-legged midget weavers”), Telemidae (“long-legged cave spiders”), Austrochilidae, Gradungulidae (“odd-claw spiders”), Mecysmaucheniidae (“trap-jaw spiders”), Palpimanidae (“palp-footed spiders”), Huttoniidae (“Hutton’s Spider”), Stenochilidae (“diamond-headed spiders”), Archaeidae (“pelican spiders”), Megadictynidae, Nicodamidae (“red-and-black spiders”), Anapidae (“ground orb-web spiders”), Theridiidae (“cobweb spiders”), Theridiosomatidae (“ray orbweavers”), Synotaxidae, Araneidae (“orbweavers”), Nesticidae (“cave cobweb spiders”), Synaphridae, Symphytognathidae (“dwarf orbweavers”), Cyatholipidae (“tree sheetweb spiders”), Physoglenidae (“hair-spike synotaxids”), Pimoidae, Linyphiidae (“sheetweb and dwarf weavers”), Mysmenidae (“dwarf cobweb weavers”), Malkaridae (“shield spiders”), Mimetidae (“pirate spiders”), Arkyidae (“triangular spiders”), Tetragnathidae (“long-jawed orb weavers”), Miturgidae (“prowling spiders”), Xenoctenidae (“desert wolf spiders”), Agelenidae (“funnel weavers”), Amaurobiidae (“hackledmesh weavers”), Macrobunidae, Anyphaenidae (“ghost spiders”), Cithaeronidae (“curly-legged ground spiders”), Clubionidae (“sac spiders”), Cheiracanthiidae (“long-legged sac spiders”), Corinnidae (“ground and ant-mimic sac spiders”), Phrurolithidae (“guardstone spiders”), Zodariidae (“ant spiders”), Ctenidae (“wandering spiders”), Viridasiidae (“zebra wandering spiders”), Ancylometidae, Desidae (“intertidal spiders”), Toxopidae (“intertidal and scuttle spiders”), Dictynidae (“meshweavers”), Cicurinidae, Hahniidae (“dwarf sheet spiders”), Cybaeidae (“soft spiders”), Cycloctenidae (“scuttling spiders”), Gallieniellidae (“long-jawed ground spiders”), Gnaphosidae (“ground spiders”), Lamponidae (“white-marked ground spiders”), Prodidomidae (“long-spinneret ground spiders”), Liocranidae (“spiny-legged sac spiders”), Trachelidae (“broad-faced sac spiders”), Dysderidae (“woodlouse hunters”), Lycosidae (“wolf spiders”), Oxyopidae (“lynx spiders”), Philodromidae (“running crab spiders”), Phyxelididae, Pisauridae (“nursery web spiders”), Dolomedidae (“raft spiders” and “fishing spiders”), Psechridae, Salticidae (“jumping spiders”), Selenopidae (“flatties” or “wall spiders”), Senoculidae (“bark hunters”), Sparassidae (“huntsman spiders”), Stiphidiidae (“sheetweb spiders” or “sombrero spiders”), Zoropsidae (“false wolf spiders”), Homalonychidae (“dusty desert spiders”), Thomisidae (“crab spiders”), Titanoecidae (“rock weavers”), Trechaleidae, Myrmecicultoridae (“Antcolony Spider”), Trochanteriidae (“scorpion spiders”), Trachycosmidae (“scorpion flat spiders”), Udubidae, Deinopidae (“net-casting spiders”), Fonteferreidae, Hersiliidae (“tree trunk spiders” or “two-tailed spiders”), Oecobiidae (“flatmesh weavers”), Penestomidae, Eresidae (“velvet spiders”), and Uloboridae (“cribellate orb weavers” or “hackled orb weavers”)
Anatomy: cephalothorax and abdomen joined by a small, cylindrical pedicel; soft, generally egg-shaped abdomen; abdomen bears spinnerets that extrude silk from up to six types of glands; chelicerae are modified fangs which are venomous in almost all families and fold away when not in use; pedipalps are small and generally used for handling prey, or sperm transfer in males; primarily four pairs of eyes on the top-front area of the cephalothorax, additional pairs of secondary eyes range between families (some can have as few as two and some cave-dwelling species have no eyes)
Diet: smaller invertebrates; some larger species may take vertebrate prey; one species is herbivorous (see propaganda below the cut)
Habitat: worldwide on every continent except Antarctica, found on nearly every land habitat
Evolved in: Late Carboniferous
Do you have a favorite in Araneae?
One or more of my favorite animals is in Araneae
I love at least one or more of these animals
I like at least one or more of these animals
I am neutral about all of these animals
I dislike all of these animals
Propaganda under the cut:
inkwash bugs