Labyrinth Spider
A labyrinth spider, sitting in the sunny entrance to its funnel web, at Holme Fen.
seen from Yemen
seen from France
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from Algeria
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Germany

seen from Poland
seen from United States
seen from Austria

seen from Germany
seen from Japan

seen from Singapore
seen from Germany
seen from Japan
seen from United States
seen from Germany
Labyrinth Spider
A labyrinth spider, sitting in the sunny entrance to its funnel web, at Holme Fen.
A female labyrinth spider (Agelena labyrinthica) in its web, in western Europe
by Charles Sharp
hi, i hope you’re well! i saw this little pupa? cocoon? egg sac? on a walk and am wondering what it could be. the way it’s attached to the shrub is so cool! found in the colorado front range.
Looks like a spider egg sac to me? But I don’t recognize which species it may be from! Anyone else recognize it?
Update: retreat of a labyrinth spider, Metepiera sp. Thanks, @bananapeppers!
I seem to have developed a pallette of greys and browns for sona designs...
A bit late, but I’ve been thinking about Into the Spider-verse again so I’ve finally had a go at developing a spider-sona. These are rough first-pass designs, will have to have more of a think about them.
They ended up based on a Labyrinth Spider. It’s from the South of the UK, rather than the North, but it seemed to fit me thematically.
@snailtownie submitted: no id needed, just wanted to show this little lady off! i found her behind the couch/while sweeping which is why there's so much dog hair in there with her 😔
She is beautiful and perfect thank you so much for sharing her :')
I found this cutie in my garden (northern Poland) today tho I have no idea what kinda spider they are. btw theyre on my wrist here so like ~1,5cm in length
Adorable! Looks like a labyrinth spider, I think. It’s a grass/funnel spider that’s fairly common across Europe :)
found this girl at work yesterday :)
Oh, what a terrible web they weave. A Labyrinth spider and its prey, a Cinnabar moth caterpillar.
Photo: Tony Margiocchi/Barcroft