. The common spiders of the United States. Spiders -- United States. M THE COMMON SPIDERS Clubiona than the other species. The color is the usual pale yellow, a little brownish on the head and legs, and with two longitudinal stripes on the cephalothorax. The abdomen is nearly white, with two stripes made up of gray spots, and scattered spots at the sides. The spots turn red in alcohol. Anyphaena saltabunda. — A pale short spi- der, with long and slender legs (fig. 46). The body is an eighth to a sixth of an inch loner. The abdomen is oval, two-thirds as wide as long, and nearly as high as it i
. The common spiders of the United States. Spiders -- United States. M THE COMMON SPIDERS Clubiona than the other species. The color is the usual pale yellow, a little brownish on the head and legs, and with two longitudinal stripes on the cephalothorax. The abdomen is nearly white, with two stripes made up of gray spots, and scattered spots at the sides. The spots turn red in alcohol. Anyphaena saltabunda. — A pale short spi- der, with long and slender legs (fig. 46). The body is an eighth to a sixth of an inch loner. The abdomen is oval, two-thirds as wide as long, and nearly as high as it is wide. The cephalothorax is three- fourths as wide as long, widest across the dorsal groove and narrowing grad- ually to half as wide in front. The eyes of the upper row are twice as large as those of the front row. The first legs are longest in both sexes, measuring in the female over twice the length of the body and in the males three times. The spines are very long on the legs and palpi but only a little darker in color. The general color is pale yellow or white, with two broken gray stripes on the cepha- lothorax and two middle and several lateral rows of light gray spots on the abdomen. The spinnerets are slender and two-jointed. The opening of the air-tubes is halfway between the spinnerets and the epigynum. The palpi of the male (fig. 47) are long and slender, and the tibia is slightly curved and has a large thin process on the outer Figs. 46, 47. Any- phaena saltabunda. — 46, female en- larged six times. 47, palpus of Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Emerton, J. H. (James Henry), 1847-1930. Boston, London, Ginn & Company
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectspiders, bookyear1902