Arachnids of North Carolina
    3 records for Tmarus rubromaculatus a crab spider
db idchecklist numbernrid idregioncountycounty splitsitesub sitedatecollectornumbermethodhabitatlatlonreferencevetting levelimmatureadultphotographspecimenvouchercommentsparkdate cvetted byobsTypeemail
8302538.000Coastal PlainHarnettCoatsCoats Park2024-03-14Mark BASINGER & Donald ZEPP1DSDCPGA35.3959-78.6594dbz202403140173FALSETRUETRUETRUEFALSEBeaten from low tree branches as SAM, molted to adult 20 Mar '24. Green hue on clypeus & lateral edges of prosoma is _not_ an artifact, but an accurate representation of the living spider. Pinkish blob on posterior right side of the opisthosoma is apparently schmutz from an injury, and not a parasite, as first suspected.2024-04-02 13:01:43Zepp001_Photo
7048538.000Coastal PlainJohnstonSmithfield210 N 3RD ST2023-05-04Donald Zepp5DSDSWRN35.5129-78.3445dbz202305040013FALSETRUETRUETRUEFALSEI had assumed my Tmarus population to be angulatus, but I captured an adult male, the palpus of which (and the LI femur:carapace ratio) are clearly rubromaculatus. I suspect there may be other "hot spots" where the species present has simply been assumed to be angulatus2023-05-07 16:33:36Zepp0Photo
6548538.000PiedmontLee1938-04-26Willis Gertsch1DSDUNKN3FALSETRUEFALSEFALSEFALSEGertsch reported his collection locale for this one male specimen to have been "Rocky River, near Sanford." While Sanford is in Lee County, the Rocky River is ca. 50 miles west, making his collection site somewhat speculative. Gertsch, W. J. 1939. A revision of the typical crab spiders (Misumeninae) of America north of Mexico. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 76: 277-442.2022-08-10 09:54:32Zepp0, Howard1, Zepp0Literature