Argiope appensa

Argiope appensa
A. appensa on Hawai'i
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae
Family: Araneidae
Genus: Argiope
Species: A. appensa
Binomial name
Argiope appensa
(Walckenaer, 1842)
Synonyms

Epeira appensa
E. crenulata
A. chrysorrhoea
A. crenulata
A. boetonica
Coganargiope reticulata
A. schoenigi

Community of multi-generational Argiope appensa on the Big Island of Hawaii

Argiope appensa is a spider that occurs on several islands in the Western Pacific Ocean. It has been introduced to Hawaii, and is found on Taiwan and New Guinea. It inhabits a wide variety of habitats, from coasts to forests.

Description

Females reach a body length of up to 7 cm and are strikingly black and yellow, while the brown males reach only about 2 cm.

In Hawaii they are referred to as Hawaiian garden spiders.[1] In Hawaii, they are known to be quite communal (see picture), with multi-generational specimens living within close quarters, using the same anchor lines for separate webs. The picture to the left shows one small commune with at least 17 spiders and 8 eggsacs.

On Guam, where Argipoe appensa is ubiquitous, it is frequently visited by Argyrodes argentatus. Locals there refer to them as banana spiders. Following the introduction of the brown tree snake and the subsequent extinction or near-extinction of many of the island's small birds, spider populations on Guam exploded in response to decreasing predation and competition. Nature writer David Quammen has called Argiope appensa "almost certainly one of the larger species" which were encountered in vast numbers during his research trip to Guam for the book The Song of the Dodo.

In popular culture

This species was used in episode "Exposé" of the Lost TV series, which was filmed on location in Hawaii. It is there named Latrodectus regina (or Medusa Spider), a fictional species of widow spider, in the family Theridiidae. The "males" that run for the female are also females, as the males are much smaller.

Gallery

References

  1. Argiope apensa at BugGuide.net

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Argiope appensa.
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