Last week I was walking along the Savage River in western MD when I came across this spider, anyone see one this color before or do you know what the name of this spider is?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...adness/005.jpg
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Last week I was walking along the Savage River in western MD when I came across this spider, anyone see one this color before or do you know what the name of this spider is?
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v6...adness/005.jpg
Looks like an easy tie.
Looks like an orange marbled weaver. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Araneus_marmoreus
In our garden this year, the tomato plants were host to quite a number of this common member of the weaver family, the garden orb.
First time ever, not a single horn worm.
http://media-3.web.britannica.com/eb...4-21DDD186.jpg
What does the bottom of the spider look like. If it's the same one I have in my flower bed, I think it has maybe yellow stripes underneath. I am assuming they are harmless?
Thanks guys, I have seen many of the black and yellow varieties but never a orange one.
Rodney
The big black and yellow garden spiders are known to trap and eat huming birds. Hence it has been many years since one appeared in my garden. I relocated all of them to the fencerow at the back of the yard. The local thrush and finch population seemed appreciative.
Ed
The info about the humming birds is good to know, I will be sure the don't build where that will happen. However, we maintain a healthy population of Carolina Wren and Brown Thrush, which probably take care of them before I know they are around.
I too have Carolina wrens, they are my favorite. I think I like them because they are loners and sleep where they can find a place for the night. They used to sleep ontop of the pillers on my back porch at night. This year for the first time in my life, I saw a ruby hummingbird moth. That was pretty awesome. The spider is a first. Up north in Mass. we got Garden spiders but looked slightly different. So, are they harmful to humans?