Bug Identifier

Bug Encyclopedia

Search and identify bugs & insects — beetles, butterflies, moths, ants, bees, spiders and more — with size, habitat, danger, behavior, and how to tell them apart.

Comb-footed Spider

Comb-footed Spider

A diverse family of spiders defined by a row of tiny serrated bristles on their hind legs, used like a comb to fling silk over prey and wrap it up in an instant.

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Orb Weaver Spider

Orb Weaver Spider

A stout-bodied spider best known for spinning the classic, near-perfect circular "orb" web strung between plants, eaves, or fences, often rebuilt fresh each night.

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Brown Recluse Spider

Brown Recluse Spider

A uniformly light-brown spider with a faint violin-shaped marking on its back and only six eyes instead of the usual eight, typically found hiding in dry, undisturbed indoor and outdoor spaces.

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Black Widow Spider

Black Widow Spider

A glossy black, globe-bodied spider best known for the red or orange hourglass marking on the underside of the female's rounded abdomen, usually found tucked in a tangled web near ground level.

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Bold Jumping Spider

Bold Jumping Spider

A stocky, fuzzy black spider with iridescent green or blue mouthparts and a bold white or orange spot on its abdomen, the bold jumper is known for its excellent eyesight, curious behavior, and ability to leap many times its own body length.

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Brown Widow Spider

Brown Widow Spider

Named for its mottled tan-and-brown coloring rather than glossy black, the brown widow is easily recognized by its distinctive spiky, off-white egg sacs and an orange hourglass on its underside.

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Tube Web Spider

Tube Web Spider

A sleek, cylindrical spider that lives inside a silk-lined tube and dashes out to seize insects that stumble across its radiating trip-lines.

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Diving Bell Spider

Diving Bell Spider

The world's only truly aquatic spider, famous for spinning an underwater silk bell that it fills with air, allowing it to live, hunt, and breed almost entirely submerged.

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Bird-dropping Spider

Bird-dropping Spider

A lumpy, white-and-brown orb-weaver that spends its days motionless on a leaf, looking uncannily like a fresh splash of bird droppings.

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Green Lynx Spider

Green Lynx Spider

A slender, bright green spider armed with long spiny legs that ambushes insects from flowers and shrubs without spinning a capture web.

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Two-Spotted Spider Mite

Two-Spotted Spider Mite

A near-microscopic mite that spins fine silk webbing over leaves as it feeds, leaving foliage stippled and pale.

arachnid
Garden Orb Weaver Spider

Garden Orb Weaver Spider

The classic maker of the round, wheel-shaped web, the garden orb weaver hangs head-down at the center of its silken snare. Many sport a cross-like pattern of pale spots on a rounded abdomen.

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Sydney Funnel-web Spider

Sydney Funnel-web Spider

Glossy black and heavily built, with large fangs held ready in front of its face, the Sydney funnel-web spider shelters in a silk-lined burrow in moist, shaded ground across the Sydney region, one of Australia's most distinctive ground-dwelling spiders.

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Six-eyed Sand Spider

Six-eyed Sand Spider

A flattened, sand-colored spider that buries itself just beneath the desert surface, ambushing prey while remaining almost invisible against the dunes.

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Golden Silk Orb-Weaver Spider

Golden Silk Orb-Weaver Spider

Famous for spinning enormous webs of shimmering golden silk, the golden silk orb-weaver is a large, long-legged spider of warm climates. Females dwarf the tiny males and hang head-down in their sprawling snares.

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Harvestman

Harvestman

An arachnid built almost entirely of legs, with a single compact, oval body segment and no waist separating it into two parts like a true spider. Common in gardens and forests worldwide, it scuttles along on impossibly long, thin legs scavenging for food after dark.

arachnid
Mesh Web Weaver

Mesh Web Weaver

A tiny, easily overlooked spider that spins a loose, bluish tangle of fuzzy silk over twig tips and seed heads to snare small insects.

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Cross Orbweaver

Cross Orbweaver

Named for the pale cross of dots marking its rounded abdomen, the cross orbweaver spins one of the most classic wheel-shaped webs, rebuilding it fresh nearly every night to keep its silk sticky and effective.

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Southern Black Widow

Southern Black Widow

Glossy jet-black and marked with a bright red hourglass on the underside of its rounded abdomen, the southern black widow is one of the most recognizable spiders in North America, typically found tucked into quiet, undisturbed corners rather than out in the open.

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Tarantula

Tarantula

The tarantula is the heavyweight of the spider world, a densely furred, ground-hugging hunter that spends most of its long life waiting in a silk-lined burrow for prey to wander past.

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Long-jawed Orb Weaver

Long-jawed Orb Weaver

A slender, stick-like spider with oversized jaws that stretches its legs flat along a stem or spins a loose orb web low over water.

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Wolf Spiderling

Wolf Spiderling

A tiny, fast-moving juvenile wolf spider, often seen riding in dozens on its mother's back before dispersing to hunt on its own across open ground.

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Tailless Whip Scorpion

Tailless Whip Scorpion

A flattened, spider-like arachnid with no stinger and no fangs, instead using a pair of long whip-like sensory legs and grasping spiny arms to feel out and seize prey in total darkness.

arachnid
Golden Silk Orb Weaver

Golden Silk Orb Weaver

Suspended in a massive, glinting web strung between trees along a forest trail, the golden silk orb weaver is one of the largest and most striking web-building spiders in the Americas, spinning silk with a distinctive yellow-gold sheen.

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