A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife
Nephila kuhlii
Like other spiders in the family Nephilidae it can weave webs so strong that sometimes even birds and bats get caught. Its webs can be found in damp places such as large trees and unpolluted areas to which no cars have access; normally several are strung together to form enormous "homes" so as to cover as much surface area as possible. This species feeds on flies, mosquitoes, moths, wasps and unfortunate beetles who happen to get tangled up. In addition to the nominate, a second subspecies is currently recognized: Nephila inaurata madagascariensis, which occurs from South Africa to the Seychelles. This species is commonly kept in captivity. Egg sacks the size of a small marble are made of thick silk and contain 100-200 eggs which hatch after two months. They start out with a 2mm legspan and grow rapidly. Males mature in one to two months depending on the form. Most males mature later and resemble the form of the female but have very little color and only a 25-30mm legspan. Mature males are rarely, if ever, observed feeding. Females mature in four months with an approximate 100mm legspan.
It lives in Southern Africa and several islands in the Indian Ocean (Madagascar, the Seychelles, Réunion, Mauritius, Rodrigues, Java).
Female
I am convinced that it is nephila kuhlii. Now that I have an ID, there are lots of web images to confirm.
Dave
I have just added my two images and a link to this post (if you don't mind).
http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/169...
Dave
Is it though. I have not found a reliable link with an image to confirm.
The images on Wiki don't match, but they are not reliable anyway.
Dave
I have seen this in Bandung too. I think I have a photo somewhere.
Dave
I don't know the several species in East Asia, some of the folks there might no which Nephila it is.