- Submitted by:
- Submitted: Apr 12, 2018
- Photographed: Apr 11, 2018
- Spider: Lycosidae (Wolf Spiders)
- Sex:
- Maturity:Adult
- Location: Orange Park, Florida, United States
- Spotted Outdoors: Man-made structure (building wall, fences, etc.)
- Found in web?: Yes
- Attributes: Egg sacs, Webs
Lycosidae
(Wolf Spiders)
Picture ID 9286
Additional Pictures
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Lycosidae
(Wolf Spiders)Family Genus Species - Submitted Oct 14, 2023
- Photographed Aug 22, 2023
- Female
- Commerce City/Brighton, Colorado, United States
- 1 Comments
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Lycosidae
(Wolf Spiders)Family Genus Species - Submitted Jul 2, 2020
- Photographed Jun 21, 2020
- Female
- Springfield , Tennessee, United States
- 3 Comments
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Lycosidae
(Wolf Spiders)Family Genus Species - Submitted Apr 21, 2020
- Photographed Apr 21, 2020
- Dallas , Texas, United States
- 1 Comments
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Lycosidae
(Wolf Spiders)Family Genus Species - Submitted Apr 22, 2020
- Photographed Mar 4, 2020
- Sorbas, Spain
- 6 Comments
Hi, and welcome to the site. Your spider is a female wolf spider with her egg sac, family Lycosidae
Pardosa species is what I see here,entangled in another spiders web.
She will carry her sac about 2 weeks then carry her brood another two weeks until hey molt and start a life for themselves.
https://bugguide.net/node/view/3389
Hi, do you happen to have an image that shows a little more of the top of the spider? It might be Tigrosa georgicola but I can’t be sure from this.
https://bugguide.net/node/view/1389437/bgimage
The narrow stripe on the carapace, may be a good call. I can agree.