Orchard orbweaver (Leucauge venusta), The Woodlands, Texas

Report and Photograph Courtesy of Christine, 11 August 2007

Editor's Notes by Jerry Cates

  
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Carla Wrote:

Hi---Me again. Here are the other two photos.   [Editor's Note: I had received a series of emails from a woman named Abigail, in Houston, in the previous week, describing without benefit of photography what I supposed to be an orchard orbweaver, so I wondered if Christine was Abigail, now writing under a nickname. She turned out to be a different person, however, whose first message had not yet arrived. The Woodlands, Texas, is a suburb north of Houston, on Interstate 45].

Notice that the frame threads of this Leucauge venusta web, at its edges, are outside the range of Christine's photograph, but the hub, attachment zone, and radial threads, along with many spiraling catching threads, are visible.  This simple symmetrical orb is characteristic of many orbweavers, including Argiope aurantia and Gasteracantha cancriformis, but varies from the slightly eccentric orb of Nephila clavipes, whose hub is constructed nearer the top than the web's lower region. The open hub is distinct from the closed hub of Argiope aurantia, but is similar to to the open hub of Nephila clavipes.

There appear to be 33 radial threads, and at least as many spiral catching threads, with five or six spirals in the attachment zone that  borders the open hub. As with Nephila clavipes, the clot of threads in the upper portion of the open hub is presumed functional, though the exact function is in dispute. Likewise, the confusion of threads halfway down the two radial threads between the spider's first legs, also has a purpose, probably associated with prey catching.  Radial threads are rigid, and serve as communicators to tell the spider not only that prey has impinged upon the orb, but also to vector attention to the prey's location.

The dorsal coloration of this spider's carapace is yellowish, or orange-green, with dark stripes on the sides. The abdomen is bulbous at its dorsal anterior aspect, and narrows somewhat posteriorly, with a silver-white background on which are impressed dark green lines laterally, with a narrow median black stripe that broadens, then separates into three stripes enclosing whitish blotches medially, and flanked by orange blotches at the lateral posterior abdomen.  The femoral and tibial segments of each leg are green, while portions of certain patella-femoral joints have an orange cast.

The female Leucauge venusta ranges in size from 5.5-7.5 mm (0.22-0.30 inch) in length. Keep that in mind when viewing these photographs, as this is a miniscule animal with a body rarely more than a quarter of an inch long.  The crouched legs stretch forward another half an inch, and backward a quarter of an inch more, making the entire mature spider about an inch long.

Ventrally, this spider has a bright green background coloration on which two yellowish spots flank the spinnerets, and two comma-shaped orange markings, nearly joined at their anterior extremities, dominate the middle of the ventral abdomen. The book lungs, anterior to these but separated from them by narrow yellowish strips, appear covered by a yellowish plate, with darkened respiratory slits at their posterior margins.  The book lungs are separated by an epigynum which has an architecture that cannot be discerned in the present phtograph.

*Note: The common name of this spider, the orchard orbweaver, is listed in the authoritative "Common Names of Arachnids, Fifth Ed., 2003", published by the American Arachnological Society Committee on Common Names of Arachnids, R. G. Breene, Chairman.  Only two species of Leucauge are found in the United States.  Besides Leucauge venusta the literature mentions Leucauge argyra, but I have not yet found definitive, discriptive material on the latter.

NOTE:  Non-commercial use of the photos posted on this website is permitted if attribution, along with a link to this page, accompanies each use. Commercial use without express permission is not permitted.

Many thanks to Christine for these excellent photos!!!

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Important Notice

Please contact us about your personal experiences, if you have been bitten by a brown recluse, black widow, or any other spider, including jumping spiders and garden spiders (the bites of which typically produce a transitory inflammation, but resolve within a few days without medical attention), whether recently or in the past thirty years, anywhere in the world. For example, the bite of a species of garden spider, the golden orb spider of Australia [Nephila edulis] typically is unremarkable, but on occasion produces medically significant secondary infections; the frequency and nature of bites experienced from that species of spider is also a part of this study. 

One object of this study is to collect data that might relate to a mysterious series of spider-related infections, involving a special pathogen, that took place in the United States and in Australia between 1977 and 2006.  Although only fifteen such infections were reported to medical establishments, seven appear to be associated with spider bites.  Some authorities suggest that the number of actual infections of this type that occurred in the U.S. and Australia during the past thirty years is much larger, but that they have been underreported.

Underreporting of specific kinds of infections can occur, either because the persons infected chose not to seek medical assistance, or the medical establishments misdiagnosed the infections as being caused by other infectious agents. 

We are seeking to establish an estimate of the number of human spider bites that occur each year by these and similar spiders, whether the bite resulted in injury to the human or not.  Next, we hope to establish the number of instances where the bite (1) became inflamed and/or infected, then resolved without medical intervention, or (2) infected, ulcerated, or led to a generalized sickness, and required medical intervention.

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