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Australia, Northern Territories

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26.02.2011 18:03, Ele-W

Very cute spiders! The latter gently embraces a horsefly from the genus close to Tabanus.


Aha, horsefly! That's what I thought. Biting, terrible. This particular horsefly, before getting into the spider's arms, bit me hard. shuffle.gif

26.02.2011 18:03, Ele-W

Yellow crab spider (2)-Thomisus spectabilis.


Thanks! smile.gif

26.02.2011 18:14, Ele-W

The nutcracker was identified by Eopenthes antennatus, although I'm not entirely sure. So I can't say for sure. And it also looks like our Russian Ampedus patricius, just one in one. (if the size is also 10-15mm, then maybe it is, although they are not sure)


Thanks! smile.gif

The size is somewhere around 1 cm, it seems to be no more.

26.02.2011 18:17, Ele-W

Hunter and prey, front view.

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26.02.2011 18:18, Ele-W

Against the sky.

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26.02.2011 18:20, Ele-W

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Nitmiluk National Park, NT, Australia. January.
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26.02.2011 18:22, Ele-W

This is the end of my day spiders for now, and tomorrow or the day after tomorrow I will show you the fruits of night hunting with a lantern. smile.gif

26.02.2011 18:47, Arikain

Spider, possibly Argiope sp. (Araneidae)

26.02.2011 23:15, Ele-W

Spider, possibly Argiope sp. (Araneidae)


Thank you. smile.gif

26.02.2011 23:17, Ele-W

A beetle was found among the night spiders.

This nutcracker is from the genus Conoderus sp.

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-05/14/2014 15: 03
Likes: 3

27.02.2011 0:02, Alexandr Zhakov

Shelkunchik. Here is the joy of the cosine smile.gif
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27.02.2011 6:11, Ele-W

Shelkunchik. Here is the joy of the cosine smile.gif


Even I've already learned to recognize snappers. smile.gif
Likes: 2

27.02.2011 6:14, Ele-W

Wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Night spiders. I went to hunt them with a flashlight, which is put on the head, there is some kind of lamp, from which the eyes of spiders in the dark glow like diamonds, if you shine them at a certain angle. No other lights have this effect.

The spiders in the river valley turned out to be much smaller than in the palm forest (so I still have plans to go to the forest with a lantern), but I trained on them.

1.

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.03.2011 05: 33
Likes: 2

27.02.2011 6:16, Ele-W

2. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Male. ©

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This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 48
Likes: 2

27.02.2011 6:17, Ele-W

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.
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27.02.2011 6:18, Ele-W

3. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.03.2011 05: 34
Likes: 3

27.02.2011 6:21, Ele-W

4. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.03.2011 05: 35
Likes: 3

27.02.2011 6:22, Ele-W

5. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

The female. ©

Very similar to a member of the genus Lycosa, but since wolf spiders are very similar, I can't be sure. Arikain ©

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This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 47
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27.02.2011 6:25, Ele-W

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.
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27.02.2011 9:25, косинус

This nutcracker is from the genus Conoderus sp, it's a pity there is no larger photo , so I would have determined up to the species. It is an Australian genus almost all the species in Oceania are unpatronized.I have 2 views in my collection, one from Australia and one from New Zealand.

27.02.2011 15:16, Ele-W

This nutcracker is from the genus Conoderus sp.


Thank you. smile.gif

27.02.2011 15:19, Ele-W

I'm still talking about night spiders.

This is still the same number 5. While I was admiring it, it kaaaak jumped into the darkness and-here...

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27.02.2011 15:20, Ele-W

It looks like a dog with prey.

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27.02.2011 15:21, Ele-W

Then he tried to hide with the prey in the grass, but the grass there is such that you can not hide.

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27.02.2011 15:23, Ele-W

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After a while, he got tired of me and my lights, so he turned on some fantastic speed and dodged off into the night. smile.gif
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27.02.2011 18:07, Arikain

The beauties smile.gif
Wolf spiders (Lycosidae).

27.02.2011 18:35, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg

And "in the teeth" then he has some kind of dung.

27.02.2011 18:36, Victor Titov

I'm still talking about night spiders.

This is still the same number 5. While I was admiring it, it kaaaak jumped into the darkness and-here...

But this top of the beetle cracks!!! One of the Aphodians, I think (genus Aphodius).

28.02.2011 5:03, Ele-W

The beauties smile.gif
Wolf spiders (Lycosidae).


Thanks! smile.gif

They really do look like wolves.

28.02.2011 5:06, Ele-W

And "in the teeth" he has some kind of dung.


But this top of the beetle cracks!!! One of the Aphodians, I think (genus Aphodius).


It's not a very large beetle. I couldn't get a better picture of the beetle. There was, however, the idea of "selecting and photographing", but somehow I did not dare to quarrel with the spider. shuffle.gif

By the way, for the future. These spiders aren't biting, are they? Really?

28.02.2011 6:42, Ele-W

Wolf Spiders (Lycosidae), continued.

6. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.03.2011 05: 42
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 6:43, Ele-W

7. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

The female. ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 49
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 6:44, Ele-W

8. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Male. ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 50
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 15:19, Ele-W

9. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Male. ©

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 50
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 15:20, Ele-W

10. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Looks like a male. ©


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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-01.03.2011 05: 38
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 15:26, Ele-W

11. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Male. ©

For reporting purposes. In the lamplight, these wolves also sometimes crawl out.

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 51
Likes: 3

28.02.2011 15:34, Ele-W

12. The wolf spider (Lycosidae). ©

Male. ©

On vertical surfaces, they run as deftly as on horizontal ones.

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Katherine Low Level Caravan Park, NT, Australia. January.

This post was edited by Ele-W-02.03.2011 05: 51
Likes: 4

28.02.2011 15:35, Ele-W

That's all, I've run out of vacation pictures. Now we have to wait for the next insect to come to the balcony or I will be brought to where there are insects. smile.gif

28.02.2011 19:27, Zlopastnyi Brandashmyg


By the way, for the future. These spiders aren't biting, are they? Really?


I would still not recommend taking them by hand.

28.02.2011 20:51, Николаевич

If you can ask me a couple of questions:Do you still use the same technique with tamron 90mm glass?, without an external flash? we can see the result without color correction?

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