Argiope appensa

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How to read a taxobox
Argiope appensa
A. appensa on Hawai'i
A. appensa on Hawai'i
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae
Family: Araneidae
Genus: Argiope
Species: A. appensa
Binomial name
Argiope appensa
(Walckenaer, 1842)
Synonyms

Epeira appensa
E. crenulata
A. chrysorrhoea
A. crenulata
A. boetonica
Coganargiope reticulata
A. schoenigi

Argiope appensa is a spider that occurs on several islands in the Western Pacific Ocean. It has been introduced to Hawai'i, and is found on Taiwan and New Guinea. It inhabits a wide variety of habitats, from coasts to forests.

Contents

Mature female (ventral view) and male (dorsal) A. appensa
Mature female (ventral view) and male (dorsal) A. appensa

Females reach a body length of up to 7cm and are strikingly black and yellow, while the brown males reach only about 2cm. [1]

On Guam, where A. appensa is ubiquitous, it is frequently visited by Argyrodes argentatus. Locals there refer to A. appensa as banana spiders. Following the introduction of the brown tree snake and the subsequent extinction or near-extinction of many of the island's small birds, spider populations on Guam exploded decreasing predation and competition. A. appensa is almost certainly one of the large species which were encountered there in vast numbers, much to his horror, by nature writer David Quammen (who is extremely arachnophobic) during his trip doing background research for the book The Song of the Dodo, as he vividly recalls therein.

  • Walckenaer, C.A. (1842). Histoire naturelle des Insects. Aptères. Paris, 2: 1-549.
  • Kerr, A.M. (2005). Behavior of web-invading spiders Argyrodes argentatus (Theridiidae) in Argiope appensa (Araneidae) host webs in Guam. Journal of Arachnology 33(1): Abstract PDF
  • Kerr, A. M. 1993. Unusually low frequency of stabilimenta in webs of Argiope appensa (Araneae: Araneidae) from the Mariana Islands: an indirect effect of an introduced avian predator? Pacific Science 47: 328-337. Abstract

Side view of female A. Appensa
Side view of female A. Appensa
A. Appensa with prey and stabiliment
A. Appensa with prey and stabiliment
A. Appensa wrapping prey with silk
A. Appensa wrapping prey with silk
A. Appensa waiting on web
A. Appensa waiting on web


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