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Grey Wall Jumper (Female)

Menemerus bivittatus

Notes:

Menemerus bivittatus is a spider in the Salticidae family commonly known as the gray wall jumper. It is a pantropical species and is usually found on the walls of buildings or on tree trunks where it stalks its prey.

Gray wall jumpers are dorso-ventrally flattened and are covered with short dense, grayish-white hairs. There are tufts of dark brown bristles near the large, forward-facing eyes. The spiders are about nine millimetres long, the male being slightly smaller than the female. The male has a blackish longitudinal dorsal stripe with a brownish-white stripe on either side of the abdomen. The carapace and chelicerae are also black and white and the legs have transverse bandings of the same colours. The female is generally paler and more brown, with a larger carapace and abdomen. Her carapace is edged with two black bands and a thin white stripe and her abdomen is edged with broad black stripes on each side which unite at the posterior end. Her legs are banded but are paler than those of the male. Immature spiders resemble the female.

The female gray wall jumper builds an eggsac in a crack or other concealed position in which she lays 25 to 40 eggs in a purse-like silken case. She guards the eggs until they hatch in about three weeks time after which the young spiders disperse.

Both young and old spiders feed mainly on small flies which alight on walls. They do not build a web but instead, stalk their prey before launching an attack by leaping on the victim. They have high visual acuity and their large eyes are able to focus on objects and detect different colours. They use their highly coordinated jumping ability to capture their prey and to move from one place to another. They are capable of capturing insects such as crane flies that are at least twice their own size.

Male spiders of this species possess a stridulatory apparatus which consists of several long bristles on the palpal femur and a series of horizontal ridges on the outer side of the chelicerae. Sound is generated when the spider rubs these ridges up and down against the palpal teeth. This is believed to be part of a courtship display by the male.

(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menemerus_b...)

1 Species ID Suggestions

Atul
Atul 10 years ago
Grey Wall Jumper (Female)
Menemerus bivittatus


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5 Comments

Sckel
Sckel 10 years ago

Thank you for ID, Atul

Sckel
Sckel 10 years ago

Thanks, ForestDragon, Sergio Monteiro and Gerardo.

Sergio Monteiro
Sergio Monteiro 10 years ago

Beautiful photo, very nice detail, congrats.

Gerardo Aizpuru
Gerardo Aizpuru 10 years ago

Great series really nice jumping spider ! you may consider to add it to the Jumping spider mission ! http://www.projectnoah.org/missions/1916...

ForestDragon
ForestDragon 10 years ago

Very pretty Jumping Spider.

Sckel
Spotted by
Sckel

Cariacica, Espírito Santo, Brazil

Spotted on Jun 4, 2013
Submitted on Jun 4, 2013

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