The first record of Evarcha pulchella (Thorell, 1895) (Araneae: Salticidae) from Pakistan with the first description of its female [PDF]
The jumping spider Evarcha pulchella (Thorell, 1895) (Salticidae) is recorded for the first time in Pakistan, based on material from the subtropical Hindu Kush dry meadows and hills. The female of this species is described for the first time.
Pir Asmat Ali
doaj
Novel Cesium Resistance Mechanism of Alkaliphilic Bacterium Isolated From Jumping Spider Ground Extract. [PDF]
Koretsune T +7 more
europepmc +1 more source
Jumping spiders attend to context during learned avoidance of aposematic prey [PDF]
Christa D. Skow, Elizabeth M. Jakob
openalex +1 more source
Cannibal Salvage Expenditure: The Subaltern Style of the Urban Peruvian Amazon
ABSTRACT This paper explores the political ecology of subaltern existence at the urban cutting edge of our apocalyptic present, in the case of Iquitos in the Peruvian Amazon. Through an ethnographically surrealist montage of multiple elements across the themes of accumulation, architecture, and art, cannibal salvage expenditure emerges as a subversive ...
Japhy Wilson
wiley +1 more source
Four new species of the jumping spider genus Portia (Araneae, Salticidae) from China. [PDF]
Xu X, Peng X, Li D.
europepmc +1 more source
Spartan Daily, May 6, 2014 [PDF]
Volume 142, Issue 38https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/1497/thumbnail ...
San Jose State University, School of Journalism and Mass Communications
core +1 more source
Male courtship can serve various purposes such as species recognition, mate localization, or advertisement of individual quality and physical condition. In predatory species such as spiders, courtship activity by the male might also reduce the risk of being predated on by the female.
Stefan ter Haar +2 more
wiley +1 more source
Sexually dimorphic dorsal coloration in a jumping spider: testing a potential case of sex-specific mimicry. [PDF]
Cook C, Powell EC, McGraw KJ, Taylor LA.
europepmc +1 more source
Wibana: How Bobonaza Runa and Forest Animals Know and Live With Each Other
ABSTRACT Runa women living along the Bobonaza river in the Ecuadorian Amazon raise captured forest animals, in a practice called wibana. Runa women are attentive to the particular ways the wiba (raised) animals interface with the world, and learn the wibas’ communicative repertoires and are able to “read” what wibas sense in the forest, including ...
James Beveridge
wiley +1 more source
The jumping spider Saitis barbipes lacks a red photoreceptor to see its own sexually dimorphic red coloration. [PDF]
Glenszczyk M +7 more
europepmc +1 more source

