Spiders


Tips for submitting spider sightings: 

Photos from various angles are sometimes necessary for specific ID.

  • front (eye arrangement, pedipalp colour)
  • dorsal (above - general colouration, carapace and abdomen patterns)
  • ventral (underneath - especially useful for some of the ground-dwelling families and orb-weaving families)
  • side (further details for general shape, abdomen patterns and eye configuration)
  • back (further details for abdomen pattern).

Comments or photos on the following also provides valuable information if/when such features are applicable and observed...

  • surroundings and location (eg. ground, leaf litter, hand rail, tree trunk)
  • web structure and silk use (eg. orb, messy & tangled, throwing silk)
  • breeding (eg. display, egg sac)
  • behaviour (eg. hunting, interaction, familiarity with people such as the threatening display of a huntsman or the friendly and curious jumping spiders that jump onto the camera lens)
  • notable, unique, exciting or strange observations (eg. spur-like protrusions from legs, camouflage, mimicry)

Please note that the size of the spider is measured by body length.

  • body size is from the top of the cephalothorax (head) to the tip of the abdomen without including the legs.

(Updated: October, 2022. Please feel free to message a spider moderator if you have any queries or suggestions for improvement)

Resources

  • Field guide: A Field Guide to Spiders of Australia authored by Robert Whyte & Greg Anderson

Announcements

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Discussion

NateKingsford wrote:
5 hrs ago
Hey @hebe, do you mean this sighting: Missulena occatoria (Red-headed Mouse Spider)

Missulena occatoria
NateKingsford wrote:
6 hrs ago
I'm aware there are some undescribed species of Neosparassus which retain the green into adulthood. I'm not the best with Sparassids tho, @EathanDouglas could shed some light on this

Neosparassus sp. (genus)
hebe wrote:
6 hrs ago
This seems confused. My sighting on 3 August 2025 was on at roughly -35.398959, 149.013870 on Centenary Trail along Murrumbidgee River near Kambah Pool, ACT. The one shown is not the photo I uploaded. My uploaded photo was first transferred to my computer which would have location coordinates -35.362, 149.087. Do you have it?

Missulena occatoria
RojanJareem wrote:
Yesterday
Thanks Nate
I’ve never seen a bright green “huntsman like” spider. It is small and perhaps a juvenile based on the following comment. The leaf it is on is a parsley leaf. Found in suburban veg garden.

The Australian Museum entry says “Some juvenile Neosparassus are bright green and in some undescribed species this colour persists as adults.”

Neosparassus sp. (genus)
HelenCross wrote:
2 Aug 2025
Lucky you - I'd love to find some!

Ordgarius magnificus
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