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No, wolf spiders are not an endangered species.
Ya, there is a species of spiders called Wolf Spiders
Well, because they are the same species. They also have the same techniques but wolf spiders do live for 5 years. Hope i helped!!!!!!!!!!!!! :)
Yes, there are a number of species of wolf spider and some do live in California.
Adult Wolf Spiders are about as big as your middle finger and your thumb curved to make a ring. I have wolf spiders in my home and i have a phobia of spiders, especially the big spiders. they are as tall as about an inch, or maybe half an inch. The "not fully grown" spiders are much faster than adult wolf spiders. These kinds of spiders are harmless, as well as 97.8% of all spiders in America.
Short answer; yes. Wolf spiders cover several hundred species and some people refer to any brown hunting (as opposed to web-weaving) spiders as wolf spiders. I hope you're not planning to move to avoid these spiders though, they're pretty harmless.
many of the predators that eats wolf spiders are lizards, birds, and other spiders
yes No they don't. Like all spiders, they lay eggs and weave them into an egg sack. Wolf spiders carry the sack with them on their abdomen, and in some species the young spiders will crawl onto the mother's back after hatching.
The scientific name for the wolf spider is "Lycosidae."
There are over 100 known genera of wolf spiders. Each genus has one or more species. There are over 2,300 species of spiders that are known. Some spiders are extremely small, so it would be easy to overlook some kinds of them. Some parts of the world are less well studied than other parts. There may be many unknown species of spiders where few people have gone to do research.
Wolf spiders have many natural enemies. These include birds, lizards, small mammals, frogs and even some other spiders.
Crickets, other Spiders, ants, and grasshoppers, and the larger species will also occasionally take small lizards and frogs.