Arachnids of North Carolina
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Common Spiders of NC
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Comments
Order:
Araneae - Spiders
Opiliones - Harvestmen
Pseudoscorpiones - Pseudoscorpions
Scorpiones - Scorpions
Scientific Name:
Common Name:
Family (Alpha):
ACROPSOPILIONIDAE-
AGELENIDAE-Funnel Weavers
AMAUROBIIDAE-Hacklemesh Weavers
ANTRODIAETIDAE-Folding Trapdoor Spiders
ANYPHAENIDAE-Ghost Spiders
ARANEIDAE-Orb Weavers
ATYPIDAE-Purseweb Spiders
BUTHIDAE-
CADDIDAE-
CHEIRACANTHIIDAE-
CHEIRIDIIDAE-
CHELIFERIDAE-
CHERNETIDAE-
CHTHONIIDAE-
CICURINIDAE-
CLUBIONIDAE-Sac Spiders
CORINNIDAE-Antmimics and Ground Sac Spiders
COSMETIDAE-Armoured harvestmen
CTENIDAE-Wandering Spiders
CYBAEIDAE-
DEINOPIDAE-Ogrefaced spider
DESIDAE-
DICTYNIDAE-Mesh Web Weavers
DYSDERIDAE-
EUCTENIZIDAE-Wafer-lid Trapdoor Spiders
FILISTATIDAE-
GARYPINIDAE-
GNAPHOSIDAE-Ground Spiders
HAHNIIDAE-
HALONOPROCTIDAE-
HYPOCHILIDAE-
LARCIDAE-
LEPTONETIDAE-
LINYPHIIDAE-Sheetweb and Dwarf Spiders
LIOCRANIDAE-Liocranid Sac Spiders
LYCOSIDAE-Wolf Spiders
MICROHEXURIDAE-
MIMETIDAE-Pirate spiders
MITURGIDAE-Prowling Spiders
MYSMENIDAE-
NEOBISIIDAE-
NEPHILIDAE-
NESTICIDAE-Scaffold Web Spiders
OECOBIIDAE-Wall spiders
OONOPIDAE-
OXYOPIDAE-Lynx Spiders
PHALANGIIDAE-
PHALANGODIDAE-Armoured harvestmen
PHILODROMIDAE-Running Crab Spiders
PHOLCIDAE-
PHONOGNATHIDAE-
PHRUROLITHIDAE-
PISAURIDAE-Nursery Web Spiders
SABACONIDAE-
SALTICIDAE-Jumping Spiders
SCLEROSOMATIDAE-
SCYTODIDAE-
SEGESTRIIDAE-
SICARIIDAE-
SPARASSIDAE-Giant Crab Spiders
STERNOPHORIDAE-
TARACIDAE-
TETRAGNATHIDAE-Long-jawed Orb Weavers
THERIDIIDAE-Cobweb Spiders
THERIDIOSOMATIDAE-Ray Spiders
THOMISIDAE-Crab Spiders
TITANOECIDAE-
TRACHELIDAE-
TRIAENONYCHIDAE-Armoured harvestmen
TRIDENCHTHONIIDAE-
ULOBORIDAE-Cribellate Orb Weavers
VAEJOVIDAE-
ZOROPSIDAE-False Wolf Spiders & Wandering Spiders
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Araneidae Members:
Acacesia hamata
Acanthepeira cherokee
Acanthepeira marion
Acanthepeira stellata
Acanthepeira venusta
Araneus alboventris
Araneus bicentenarius
Araneus bivittatus
Araneus bonsallae
Araneus cingulatus
Araneus diadematus
Araneus gadus
Araneus guttulatus
Araneus iviei
Araneus juniperi
Araneus marmoreus
Araneus miniatus
Araneus niveus
Araneus nordmanni
Araneus partitus
Araneus pegnia
Araneus pratensis
Araneus saevus
Araneus thaddeus
Araneus trifolium
Araneus tuscarora
Araneus unidentified species
Araniella displicata
Argiope aurantia
Argiope florida
Argiope trifasciata
Cyclosa caroli
Cyclosa conica
Cyclosa turbinata
Eriophora ravilla
Eustala anastera
Eustala cepina
Eustala emertoni
Gasteracantha cancriformis
Gea heptagon
Hypsosinga funebris
Hypsosinga rubens
Kaira alba
Larinia directa
Larinioides cornutus
Larinioides patagiatus
Larinioides sclopetarius
Mangora gibberosa
Mangora maculata
Mangora placida
Mangora spiculata
Mastophora bisaccata
Mastophora phrynosoma
Mastophora stowei
Mastophora timuqua
Mecynogea lemniscata
Metazygia calix
Metazygia carolinalis
Metazygia wittfeldae
Metepeira labyrinthea
Micrathena gracilis
Micrathena mitrata
Micrathena sagittata
Neoscona arabesca
Neoscona crucifera
Neoscona domiciliorum
Neoscona nautica
Neoscona oaxacensis
Neoscona pratensis
Ocrepeira ectypa
Ocrepeira georgia
Singa keyserlingi
Verrucosa arenata
NC
Records
Larinioides cornutus
- Furrow orbweaver
Male
Taxonomy
Order:
ARANEAE
Infraorder:
Araneomorphae
Family:
Araneidae
Comments:
Pronounced lar-i-nee-OY-deez, and presumably named for the ancient Italian town of Larinium, with the suffix "oides" meaning "similar to." Formerly placed in genera Araneus, Nuctenea, and Epeira.
Species Comment:
Alternate common name, Foliate orbweaver - referring to the distinct dorsal pattern
Identification
Online Description/Photos:
BugGuide
Google
,
iNaturalist
,
Wikipedia
,
GBIF
Technical Description:
Spiders of North America - Bradley; Spiders of the Carolinas – Gaddy; BugGuide; Bon, 2011; Partridge 2011; Foelix 2011; Prokop 2006; Howell and Jenkees, 2004; Webber, 2002; "Larinioides cornutus", 2013; Araújo and Gonzaga, 2007; Kirindi, et al., 2005;
Comments:
Abdomen is a smooth round oval, shiny with few hairs. Can be gray to brown with a dark folium that is darkest at the margins. Sides of abdomen, below the dark folium is pale and unmarked, unlike others in the genus. Cephalathorax is brownish red, legs are banded with stout hairs. Males are similar with smaller abdomen and prominent palpi. To separate from other species in the genus, L. cornutus has a shiny, bald appearance and shorter legs, and no middle band on metatarsus IV.
Total Length:
Small to medium size, female total body length 6.5-14 mm. Male total body length 5.7-8.5 mm. Weight 0.1-0.3 grams.
Adult ID:
identifiable by photo
Distribution in North Carolina
Comments:
Common throughout North Carolina and the eastern United States. Adults can be seen all year. Once eggs are fertilized by the male, female furrow spiders hide their egg sacs within large web cocoons on leaves. Fertilized eggs hatch in the cocoon within a month. Hatched spiderlings remain in the protective cocoon for two to three months until they reach maturity. When they have fully matured, spiderlings disperse in search of foraging opportunities. Can live up to two years. Usually mature in spring but can mature at any time of year.
County Map:
Clicking on a county returns the records for the species in that county.
Adult phenology:
High Mountains (HM) ≥ 4,000 ft.
Low Mountains (LM) < 4,000 ft.
Piedmont (Pd)
Coastal Plain (CP)
Click on graph to enlarge
Habitats and Life History
Habitats:
forests or damp areas especially near bodies of waters such as large lake shores. Can build on buildings, bridges and other structures.
Observation Methods:
Visual observation, beat sheets.
Abundance/Frequency:
Common
Silk / Web:
Medium sized orb web, often on buildings and structures, low shrubs, brush piles, downed trees or even park gates. Web rebuilt in evening.
Prey:
These spiders are primarily insectivores. They use varying sizes of orb webs to capture prey during the day; prey items typically include damselflies (Platycnemis pennipes), gnats, and common mosquitoes (Culex pipiens). Like many arachnids, this species produces a venom in the anterior prosoma within a specialized gland which is connected to the chelicerae via small canals. Each chelicera has four pairs of teeth. Once snared and entangled within the orb web, furrow spiders wrap their prey in silk and immobilize it, injecting venom through their chelicerae, and transport it off the web. Digestive enzymes break down the prey's internal organs into a fluid form for consumption, leaving very little waste for excretion. Larger prey are stored in order to give digestive enzymes ample time to act.
Predators:
Many birds feed on these spiders, especially if they are not well hidden during the day. Larger insects such as black and yellow mud daubers (Sceliphron caementarium) are also predators of adult furrow spiders, while flesh fly larvae (Sarcophaga sexpunctata)are known predators of their egg cocoons.
Behavior:
This spider often sits in the center of its web at night and occassionally during the day. The retreat is near an upper corner of the web in a crevice, plant or animal matter or similar hiding place. The spider does not usually employ a signal line to the hub, but may hold any radial strand.
Female furrow spiders produce a silken cocoon that can fit both male and female inside during copulation. Once it is made, females reside in this cocoon and emit pheromones, which males sense through chemoreceptors. Females carry unfertilized eggs inside the cocoon and, once inside the cocoon, males insert sperm into females using their pedipalps. Fertilized eggs, which are yellow in color, are then nested within an egg sac, which the female will place in a protected location such as the underside of a leaf. Further copulation may occur if a female has additional unfertilized eggs after mating once, provided a male is still present and protecting the hidden egg sac. Males are sometimes (but not always) killed and eaten following successive mating; regardless, they typically die soon after mating. Females die following egg laying, sometimes surviving until spiderlings have hatched from their cocoon.
When females are well fed, they focus on creating more eggs for reproduction rather than web construction. When food is difficult to find, no resources are put into producing unfertilized eggs or a silken cocoon for reproduction. Mating can occur from spring through fall and is usually only limited by resource availability.
These spiders are solitary predators who build their webs close to damp vegetation or any man-made location sheltered from the sun. Their orb webs are typically low to the ground in shrubbery or between grasses and consist of 20-25 radii. Average mesh size is 5 mm with a total area ranging from 600 to 1100 cm^2. Furrow spiders remain at the hub of their webs or in nearby shade all day. Individuals ingest their web each night, recycling silk material to rebuild daily damage. When food is scarce, these spiders may make more or larger webs in a single night, in an effort to snare more prey. When food is abundant, they more often forego continual web creation and females invest solely in creating cocoons for reproduction.
Furrow spiders have a lower row of 6 eyes, paired horizontally across their heads, and an additional pair of eyes located directly above the center of the lower row. Females produce pheromones during mating season, which are detected by males through chemoreceptors. These spiders also are extremely sensitive to vibrations that they sense using macrosetate and filiform hairs along their legs (filiform hairs are also located on their abdomens). Small receptors called slit sensilla are arranged along their exoskeletons, detecting any pressure against their bodies.
Although venomous, these spiders only bite humans if their webs are threatened and, even then, bites are only superficial and do not typically require medical attention. There are no known adverse effects of furrow spiders on humans. Furrow spiders provide some assistance through their predation on insects considered to be pests by humans.
Status in North Carolina
Natural Heritage Program Status:
Natural Heritage Program Ranks:
State Protection:
Comments:
This species is common throughout its range and currently has no special conservation status.
Photo Gallery for
Larinioides cornutus
- Furrow orbweaver
40 photos are available. Only the most recent 30 are shown.
Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2024-11-04
Chatham Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2024-10-23
Lenoir Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Spencer Kenan on 2024-07-28
Ashe Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Spencer Kenan on 2024-07-28
Ashe Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2024-06-18
Macon Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2024-06-16
Macon Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Mark Basinger on 2024-04-30
Wilson Co.
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Recorded by: Mark Basinger on 2024-04-30
Wilson Co.
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Recorded by: Mark Basinger on 2024-03-31
Chatham Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Mark Basinger on 2024-03-31
Chatham Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Mark Basinger on 2024-03-31
Chatham Co.
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Recorded by: Tim Lacey on 2023-11-18
Perquimans Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Mark BASINGER & Donald ZEPP on 2023-11-06
Edgecombe Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2023-09-14
Rutherford Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Travis McLain on 2023-08-08
Cabarrus Co.
Comment:
Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2023-07-27
Orange Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2023-06-17
Avery Co.
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Recorded by: David George, Stephen Dunn on 2023-02-23
Orange Co.
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Recorded by: Donald Zepp on 2022-09-15
Johnston Co.
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Recorded by: Donald Zepp on 2022-07-01
Pamlico Co.
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Recorded by: Dean Furbish on 2022-04-01
Wake Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2022-02-17
Wake Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2021-11-21
Wilkes Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2021-11-21
Wilkes Co.
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Recorded by: K. Bischof on 2021-09-10
Transylvania Co.
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Recorded by: K. Bischof on 2021-08-04
Transylvania Co.
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Recorded by: Vin Stanton on 2020-06-06
Buncombe Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2016-07-21
Stokes Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2016-06-03
Orange Co.
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Recorded by: Brian Bockhahn on 2015-07-22
Stanly Co.
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