Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Order Opiliones - Harvestmen

Vonones ornata Harvestman - Leiobunum Carab*id eggs? Hardly! Try Opiliones. Carab*id eggs?  Hardly!  Try Opiliones. Daddy-long-legs - Protolophus Which Harvestman? Blue Eyed Spider daddy-long-legs
Classification
Kingdom Animalia (Animals)
Phylum Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Class Arachnida (Arachnids)
Order Opiliones (Harvestmen)
Other Common Names
English: daddy-long-legs/daddy-longlegs, granddaddy-long-legs, harvest spiders, shepherd spiders, phalangids, opilionids.
French: faucheurs
German: Weberknechte
Numbers
>6400 species worldwide.
Size
Variable; body sizes range from a few millimeters to a few centimeters. Legs are several times the size of the body in the more familiar "daddy-long-legs" forms of the Phalangioidea.
Identification
Easily separated from spiders by the broad fusion of the two body segments, so that the body appears to be composed of a singular segment. Also, as they do not possess silk glands, harvestmen can't form webs. Uniquely among the arachnids fertilization is direct: males possess a penis (also referred to in the literature as pene, aedagus or intermittent organ).
Range
Global, except Antarctica.
Habitat
All habitats (except possibly deserts) in Canada & the USA: forests, grasslands, wetlands, mountains, caves, chaparral, and anthropogenic habitats.
Season
Not likely to be found in winter months in northern/montane regions, except as overwintering populations in refugia (e.g., caves).
Food
Variable.
Life Cycle
Egg, juvenile, adult. Some reproduce by direct fertilization (males possess a penis); others reproduce parthenogenetically (i.e., without males).
Print References
(1)
(2)
Works Cited
1.Spiders and Their Kin: A Golden Guide from St. Martin's Press
By Herbert W. Levi, Lorna R. Levi, Nicholas Strekalovsky
2.Harvestmen: The Biology of Opiliones
By Ricardo Pinto-Da-Rocha, Glauco Machado, and Gonzalo Giribet (eds.)