Diaea dorsata · rudasis lapavoris Diaea dorsata · rudasis lapavorisThumbnailsDiaea dorsata · rudasis lapavorisDiaea dorsata · rudasis lapavorisThumbnailsDiaea dorsata · rudasis lapavorisDiaea dorsata · rudasis lapavorisThumbnailsDiaea dorsata · rudasis lapavoris

Diaea dorsata · rudasis lapavoris

prey: Baccha elongata

It is one of the smaller crab spiders, with a Palearctic distribution. Females can grow up to 6 mm, males up to 4 mm. Prosoma and legs are green, the opisthosoma is yellowish with a brown mark. Diaea dorsata prefers forest edges and can be found on leaves. The subadults overwinter under the bark of dead trees. Adults appear in May. An agranular green pigment is incorporated into the mesocuticle of this species and thus lost between moults.

The males have an extended non-damaging combat ritual: they stand opposed, stretch their front legs and dance around each other. This can go on for hours. This is highly unusual for crab spiders, but for example often found in jumping spiders.

model Canon EOS 6D
f 16
EV± 0.0 EV
speed 1/160 s
flash yes, mode: compulsory
ISO 100
focal 65 mm
mode manual