
Comments & ID Thoughts
Wooo!!! Looks just like Lycosidae from dorsal abdomen and carapace of cephalothorax. One thing stands out is that the carapace straight line often seen on Lycosidae goes past the eyes, down face and stops at chelicerae. I have never seen this. It has a stripe down its face. Also...the line on the carapace is the thinnest cephalothorax line I have seen on a wolf spider. It's more of a thin line, instead of wide.
- Submitted by:
- Submitted: Mar 12, 2023
- Photographed: Mar 12, 2023
- Spider: Unidentified
- Location: Anderson, South Carolina, United States
- Spotted Outdoors: Ground layer (leaf litter, dirt, grass, etc),Under rock, log, or debris,Freshwater river, lake, stream
- Found in web?: No
- Attributes:
Possible Tigrosa aspersa
Tigrosa has 5 species, 2-3 being in my area. Tigrosa is known (T.helluo…T aspersa) as having thin bright stripe down face. Sometimes with stripe being brightest in AME region of cephalothorax.