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Cat-faced Spider

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The cat-faced spider is a small member of the orb weaver family that rarely exceeds a centimeter in length and is harmless to humans. There are two "horns" on the abdomen that if looked at the right way, appear to be shaped like cats' ears with two small dimples exactly where you would expect to see the cat's eyes. Common in the Western United Staes and Canada, these spiders breed in the summer, lay an egg sac in the fall, and the spiderlings hatch and disperse in the wind via "web parachutes" in the spring to start the life cycle all over again.

Copyright
©2017
Image Size
6000x4000 / 9.4MB
www.leightonphotography.com
Keywords
Araneus gemmoides, Kittitas County, PNW, Pacific NW, Pacific Northwest, Selah, Washington, Yakima, Yakima Canyon, Yakima River, arachnid, autumn, camp, campground, cat-faced spider, desert, fall, female, orb web weaver, orbweaver, spider
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Spiders
The cat-faced spider is a small member of the orb weaver family that rarely exceeds a centimeter in length and is harmless to humans. There are two "horns" on the abdomen that if looked at the right way, appear to be shaped like cats' ears with two small dimples exactly where you would expect to see the cat's eyes. Common in the Western United Staes and Canada, these spiders breed in the summer, lay an egg sac in the fall, and the spiderlings hatch and disperse in the wind via "web parachutes" in the spring to start the life cycle all over again.