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Species Habronattus decorus
A Revision of the Jumping Spider Genus Habronattus F.O.P.-Cambridge (Araneae; Salticidae), with Phenetic and Cladistic Analyses By Charles E. Griswold University of California Publications, Entomology Volume 107, February, 1987
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Jumping Spiders In The Cincinnati Region Of Ohio By Charles M. Oehler College Of Biological Sciences - The Ohio State University, Ohio Biological Survey - Biological Notes No. 13, 1980
Genera and species should be cross-referenced at the World Spider Catalog for current nomenclature.
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The Common Spiders of the United States By James Henry Emerton Dover (reprint) Ginn & Company (original), 1902
Public domain work. Also available in Google Books.
Contributed by Cotinis on 16 January, 2008 - 11:32am |
The Life of the Spider By Jean-Henri Fabre Kessinger Publishing, 2004
Book Description
1913. With a Preface by Maurice Maeterlinck. From the Preface: J.H. Fabre, as some few people know, is the author of half a score of well-filled volumes in which, under the title of Souvenirs Entomologiques, he has set down the results of fifty years of observations, study and experiment on the insects that seem to us the best-known and the most familiar: different species of wasps and wild bees, a few gnats, flies, beetles and caterpillars; in a word, all those vague, unconscious, rudimentary and almost nameless little lives which surround us on every side and which we contemplate with eyes that are amused, but already thinking of other things, when we open our window to welcome the first hours of spring, or when we go into the gardens or the fields to bask in the blue summer days. This volume focuses on the Spider.
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Spiders in Ecological Webs (Cambridge Studies in Ecology) By David Wise Cambridge University Press, 1995
Review
"...useful reading for anyone seeking to bridge the gap between data and theory in ecology. It should make an interesting text for a graduate-level course in community ecology, help students to plan research and set any ecologist thinking about possible generalizations." Deborah M. Gordon, Nature
"This timely book appears when there is still a manageable number of studies of spider ecology: in less than 300 pages of text, Wise covers all the major work in depth." Elizabeth M. Jakob, Science
"...the writing is clear, evenly presented, and logically organized; the figures are well integrated with the written text....An excellent book for academic libraries supporting programs in agriculture, biology, ecology, and entomology." S.L. Smith, Choice
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American Spiders and their Spinning Work By Henry C. McCook Coachwhip Publications, 2006
The Rev. Henry C. McCook spent years researching and writing his 3 volume set, American Spiders and their Spinningwork. The three volumes were originally self-published in 1889, 1890, and 1894, under the auspices of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia (where McCook was vice-president). Primarily covering the orb-weaving spiders, there is plenty of material on jumping spiders, wandering spiders, trapdoor spiders, and other species. This is one of the most thorough examinations of the natural history of American spiders, but due to its scarcity (only a limited number of volumes were originally printed), it is not well known by spider enthusiasts today. For the purpose of this reprint, the text and figures of all three volumes have been placed in Book 1. The color plates have been placed in Book 2.
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American Spiders By Willis J. Gertsch Van Nostrand Reinhold; Second edition, 1979
Genera and species should be cross-referenced at the World Spider Catalog for current nomenclature.
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Guide To Some Common Colorado Spiders By Walker Van Riper University of Colorado Museum Leaflets, Boulder, CO, 1950
Genera and species should be cross-referenced at the World Spider Catalog for current nomenclature.
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