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coecatus group (Habronattus coecatus group)
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Habronattus borealis
Photo#1282480
Copyright © 2016
Cheryl Johnson
Jumping Spider -
Habronattus borealis
Campton, Grafton County, New Hampshire, USA
August 27, 2016
Size: 4-5mm
Tiny, very quick jumper found in small rocks along a river. Actually, there were quite a few of them, all right at the edge of the water.
Images of this individual:
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Contributed by
Cheryl Johnson
on 27 August, 2016 - 11:18am
Last updated 12 October, 2016 - 8:48am
Moved
Moved from
Habronattus
.
…
Ben Coulter
, 12 October, 2016 - 8:48am
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Moved to genus for now
Moved from
Jumping Spiders
.
…
Chad Heins
, 29 September, 2016 - 7:54am
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Male - Jumping Spider
This might be a young male
Habronattus borealis
, but I'm not sure. (widespread eastern range) Some of the mature males have red faces. Maybe he is a teenager.? Let's see what the experts say.
…
Bob Biagi
, 27 August, 2016 - 1:56pm
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borealis
It is
borealis
, but this is a mature male. The immature males are the ones with reddish on the face (a trait common in this genus).
…
Ben Coulter
, 12 October, 2016 - 8:50am
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Moved
Moved from
ID Request
.
…
Ken Wolgemuth
, 27 August, 2016 - 12:43pm
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