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Photo#286103
Longjawed Orb Weaver - Tetragnatha straminea - female

Longjawed Orb Weaver - Tetragnatha straminea - Female
Lancaster, Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
June 7, 2009
Size: 10mm

Images of this individual: tag all
Longjawed Orb Weaver - Tetragnatha straminea - female Longjawed Orb Weaver - Tetragnatha straminea - female

Moved

Tetragnatha cf. straminea
Here is a lateral view:

I feel reasonably confident that this is T. straminea -- the profile of the abdomen of the various species is used in all the literature, and the profile fits here -- but would have liked to get a better view of the epigyne (was too indistinct -- I wasn't entirely sure what I was seeing; the attempted dissection didn't help much).

-K

Moved
Sounds like it's probably T. straminea, but I'll wait for your final determination. Kevin, thanks for checking these specimens.

Tetragnatha cf. straminea (kmp-5720)
Here the lateral eyes are clearly farther apart than are the medial eyes. According to Levi (1981) this limits our possibilities somewhat; no tail beyond the spinnerets further limits the choices. I've come down to: T. straminea and T. pallescens.

Originally I thought that pallescens was the right choice, based on Paquin & Dupérré's book, but the description (all silver) doesn't fit. Levi describes the abdomen of straminea as so: "the upper, silvery half of each side is clearly delineated from the ventral half by a
straight line." Dondale et al (2003) write: "abdomen silvery dorsally ... silvery dorsal half abruptly changes to darker ventral half along even line." This certainly fits this specimen well.

To be certain, I will have to try to dissect the epigyne -- not so easy, but maybe I'll give it a shot.

-K

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