Phil Bendle Collection:Bird-dropping spider (Celaenia olivacea): Difference between revisions

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Though the small (7mm) Celaenia olivacea is a native orb spider it is unusual because it builds no orb web. Their common name is the "Bird-dropping spider" because of its strange shape and strange colouring which makes it look like birds droppings (see photos below). This is a specialised camouflage against predators. They are found usually dangling upside down on a silk thread. It was not known how these spiders caught prey with one thread. It seems that they are able to attract male leafroller moths by producing a special scent like the pheromone produced by a female leafroller moth to attract a male partner. The female Celaenia lays up to eight small round silk egg sacs which are 5 to 6 mm wide and have a stalk on one end and have four or five knobs on its surface. These are found hanging in a group tied together with silk threads. The female spider hangs on a thread underneath the eggs until they hatch.
Though the small (7mm) Celaenia olivacea is a native orb spider it is unusual because it builds no orb web. Their common name is the "Bird-dropping spider" because of its strange shape and strange colouring which makes it look like birds droppings (see photos below). This is a specialised camouflage against predators. They are found usually dangling upside down on a silk thread. It was not known how these spiders caught prey with one thread. It seems that they are able to attract male leafroller moths by producing a special scent like the pheromone produced by a female leafroller moth to attract a male partner. The female Celaenia lays up to eight small round silk egg sacs which are 5 to 6 mm wide and have a stalk on one end and have four or five knobs on its surface. These are found hanging in a group tied together with silk threads. The female spider hangs on a thread underneath the eggs until they hatch.


[[File:Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-1.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]]


[[File:Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-24.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]]


[[File:Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-26.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]]


 
[[File:Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-20.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]]
 
 
 


The hanging egg sacs of  Celaenia olivacea  <br />
The hanging egg sacs of  Celaenia olivacea  <br />
 
[[File:Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider eggsacs-4.JPG|frameless|upright 2.25]]
 
 
 
 
 
 





Latest revision as of 11:29, 24 September 2019

Kingdom: Animalia 
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae
Family: Araneidae
Genus: Celaenia
Species: Celaenia olivacea
Common name: Bird-dropping spider

Though the small (7mm) Celaenia olivacea is a native orb spider it is unusual because it builds no orb web. Their common name is the "Bird-dropping spider" because of its strange shape and strange colouring which makes it look like birds droppings (see photos below). This is a specialised camouflage against predators. They are found usually dangling upside down on a silk thread. It was not known how these spiders caught prey with one thread. It seems that they are able to attract male leafroller moths by producing a special scent like the pheromone produced by a female leafroller moth to attract a male partner. The female Celaenia lays up to eight small round silk egg sacs which are 5 to 6 mm wide and have a stalk on one end and have four or five knobs on its surface. These are found hanging in a group tied together with silk threads. The female spider hangs on a thread underneath the eggs until they hatch.

Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-1.JPG

Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-24.JPG

Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-26.JPG

Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider-20.JPG

The hanging egg sacs of  Celaenia olivacea  
Celaenia olivacea bird dropping spider eggsacs-4.JPG