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| » Stats |
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Top Poster: glsammy (15,069) | | Welcome to our newest member, shipin | | 
16-08-2010, 09:21 PM
| | Commander of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1,091
| | | Garden Spider help This Araneus diadematus female was situated in a garden in Bristol. My query is...why are the legs spines so pronounced? I have seen and photographed many of this species but never seen one so 'prickly'. | 
16-08-2010, 10:13 PM
|  | Member of the Wild Empire | | Join Date: Sep 2009 Location: Amersfoort, The Netherlands
Posts: 363
| | | Re: Garden Spider help I noticed that the spines on Araneidae species really stand out after the last moulting, i.e. when the spiders become adults. So you might encounter specimens that are nearly as large, but without those large and pronounced spines.
Below is a subadult Araniella: 
And here is the same spider after the moulting:
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