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Hogna wolf spider (family Lycosidae) showing the enlarged posterior median eyes typical of the family. The eyes of spiders vary significantly in their structure, arrangement, and function. They usually have eight, each being a simple eye with a single lens rather than multiple units as in the compound eyes of insects. The specific arrangement ...
The underside and head of a female ecribellate entelegyne spider. Abdomen or opisthosoma: One of the two main body parts , located towards the posterior end; see also Abdomen § Other animals; Accessory claw: Modified setae at the tip of the tarsus in web-building spiders; used with tarsal claws to grip strands of the web [1]
Khorata diaoluoshanensis (at Wikispecies) [10] Caponioidea; Caponiidae—family with species with 8, 6, 4 and 2 eyes and some with a variable number of eyes; Tetrablemmidae; Dysderoidea—superfamily of six-eyed spiders; Dysderidae; Oonopidae; Orsolobidae; Segestriidae; Trogloraptoridae; Entelegynae; Archaeoidea; Micropholcommatidae ...
Enchanted Scepters is a point-and-click adventure game, released in 1984. [ 1 ] The player must find the four fire, earth, air and water scepters hidden across the Kingdom, and return them to the Wizard.
Females build vertically-oriented orb webs about 1 to 2 m (3.3 to 6.6 ft) from the ground and 0.45 to 1 m (1.5 to 3.3 ft) in diameter. [6] [16] They are circular with a very dense spiral pattern woven around twenty to thirty rays attached to support threads. [16] [30] The rays do not meet at the centre, but are connected to a small central ring ...
Rosetta Code is a wiki-based programming chrestomathy website with implementations of common algorithms and solutions to various programming problems in many different programming languages. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It is named for the Rosetta Stone , which has the same text inscribed on it in three languages, and thus allowed Egyptian hieroglyphs to be ...
Deinopidae, also known as net casting spiders, is a family of cribellate [1] spiders first described by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1850. [2] It consists of stick-like elongated spiders that catch prey by stretching a web across their front legs before propelling themselves forward.
Canthigaster amboinensis, commonly known as the Ambon pufferfish, the Ambon toby, or the spider-eye puffer, is a species of pufferfish of the family Tetraodontidae. The species is commonly seen in the tropical Indo-Pacific Ocean, including Australia, Indonesia, Japan, Papua New Guinea, Taiwan and the Hawaiian Islands . [ 2 ]