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Species Agelenopsis naevia
The Generic and Specific Status of Four Ohio Spiders of the Genus Agelenopsis By Seyler, Paul J. The Ohio Journal of Science, 1941
ISSN: 0030-0950
Volume 41, Issue 2 (March, 1941)
Find it online at The Knowledge Bank at OSU.
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PURPOSE OF PAPER AND ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This paper is an attempt to determine, from a detailed
study of the epigyna and palps of a large number of specimens,
the true status of the four forms of this genus found in Ohio.
This research was conducted in the Department of Zoology,
The Ohio State University. The author wishes to acknowledge
his indebtedness to Dr. W. M. Barrows, of the Department of
Zoology and Entomology, for the advice and criticism given
Contributed by Jay Barnes on 15 December, 2008 - 1:35am |
Arachnids By Jan Beccaloni University of California Press; 1 edition (November 1, 2009) , 2009
With around 11 distinctive lineages and over 38,000 species of spiders alone, arachnids are an amazingly diverse group of invertebrates--and with names like the Goliath Bird-Eating Spider, the Tailless Whip Spider, and the Harvestman, they can be both spectacular and captivating. Most books about arachnids focus on spiders, neglecting scorpions, ticks, mites, wind spiders, and other fascinating yet poorly understood groups. This adventurous volume summarizes all existing knowledge about each major type of arachnid, revealing their secrets through detailed species accounts, brilliant photographs, and a compelling cast of eight-legged characters.
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Predator Upon A Flower: Life History and Fitness in a Crab Spider By Douglass H. Morse Harvard University Press, 2007
I highly recommend this thoughtful work to any individual interested in the natural history, life history parameters, foraging behavior, and fitness of any organism. In addition to containing a wealth of information on the biology of a wide-ranging prarie spider commonly found in the flowerheads of milkweed, goldenrod, and prarie rose, this reasonably priced work may be regarded as a manual of research design and methods useful in undertaking nature studies anywhere. It will make a valuable addition to your library.
--Hank Guarisco (Great Plains Research )
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Eight-Legged Marvels By Chad Arment Coachwhip Publications, 2008
Eight-Legged Marvels explores the diversity of colors, shapes, sizes, and behaviors of spiders around the world. Beyond a basic review of the biology of spiders, it offers incentive to think about beauty and design in a fascinating group of animals.
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SPIDERS The Ultimate Predators By Stephen Dalton Firefly Books [U.S.] Inc., 2008
Spiders are the most successful of all terrestrial predators.
Humans share the planet with about 40,000 known species of the remarkable creatures called spiders. From mountaintops to seashores and from ponds to deserts, spiders are likely to be nearby.
Stephen Dalton provides fascinating information on the astonishing array of techniques spiders use for catching their prey: trapping in webs, lassoing, jumping, stealing, chasing, ambushing, spitting, fishing, masquerading as other animals and even attracting prey by mimicking the prey's pheromones.
Although spiders have an image problem, many of these intriguing creatures are actually not at all creepy. The jumping spiders, by far the most numerous single group, have, some might say, an almost cuddly appearance.
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The Private Life of Spiders By Paul Hillyard Princeton University Press, 2008
Review
Paul Hillyard's Private Life of Spiders is enjoyable to read, very informative, and beautifully illustrated. The photographs are truly stunning and make a wonderful complement to the text's excellent information on spider life and biology for the general reader. This book will be a terrific addition to any naturalist's or spider lover's library.
(Paula E. Cushing, president of the American Arachnological Society )
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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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