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Photography with cameras Nikon D3x, Nikon D300, Canon 50D Image editing with Photoshop |
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Keyword: Web | Overview - a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z | | Seite 2 von 2 1 2 | | | | The females lay purplish-pink eggs in cocoons, at the edge of their web. The females watch over and care for their brood until the young hatch and become independent. | | |
| | ...ales, takes place in May/June. Through the use of a special grip, the male spiders avoid the female’s deadly bite and leave after mating. In order to store the fertilized eggs, females produce a dark green cocoon , and encase it in a fine white web. . The cocoon is attached to parts of plants (mostly leaves) and is guarded and protected against predators by the mother until the young spiders hatch, which takes about 100 days. | | |
| | | ...olour. They remain on the leaves for 3 to 5 days before the larvae hatch. When the larvae (caterpillars) have hatched, they build a tissue on the leaf, which initially covers the tip and then the whole leaf, under which they can eat undisturbed. The web, however (as in the case of thistles) between leaf growth and stem can be mounted. | | |
| | The caterpillars appear from June to July and from August to May in the following year. They live (two generations at once) in a web on the upper side of the leaves of their food plants (including lichwort, comfrey and stinging nettle), and eat the leaves down to the skeleton. At the end of their development, the larvae pupate in a thick, white cocoon inside a leaf or near the... | | |
| | Money spiders reach body lengths of 1.5 - 3 mm. The shape of their webs in their slightly curved (dome) structure remembers to canopies. These spiders owe their German name to the shape of their web which is slightly domed like a baldachin - the canopy over a tomb or altar. | | |
| | Although running crab spiders are classed as web building spiders, they do not spin webs to catch prey. They ambush their prey and catch it on the run. They also do not build moulting or overwintering places. | | |
| | Oak spider | | ...s formerly known as Araneus ceropegia or Araneus vachoni. This species belongs to the genus Aculepeira, in the order spiders (Araneae), the suborder Opisthothelae, the infraorder Araneomorphae, the superfamily Araneoidea (Araneoidea), the family orb-web spiders (Araneidae), the subfamily Araneinae and the tribe Araneini. | | |
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| Frequent Queries: | | larvae hatch creating web (1) | | | | | | |
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