Eating a spider will not poison you.
Almost all Spiders have venom. Most venoms are not very toxic to human beings. A jumping spider can have a fairly large quantity of venom that is fairly toxic to humans. However, that just means that if a big jumping spider bites you it will make you hurt enough to make you wish you had been more careful. It is pretty hard to get a jumping spider to bite you
A tiny jumping spider will be unlikely to bite you, and if it bites you then the amount of venom it delivers will not be enough to make you feel much if any pain. On top of that, a truly tiny jumping spider's fangs are so small that they might not get through the layer of dead cells on your epidermis.
Never say never because you never know what will turn up next. Probably nobody has ever been bitten by this tiny metallic jumping spider. But unless this spider is very much unlike all the jumping spiders of various species that people have been bitten by, it is a good bet that its bite would not be a medical problem for any human.
Jumping spiders are often mistaken for being dangerous, but they are not. The jumping spider is not poisonous to humans.
Daring Jumping Spider http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phidippus_audax
No. I live in Michigan and its most likely a jumping (Zebra) spider or a parsons spider. The only two poisonous spiders we have to worry about are the Northern Black Widow and the (rare) Brown Recluse.
The Funnel Web spider is the most poisonous.
A poisonous spider can.
My guess is that this spider you saw was either a Jumping Spider (quite possibly a Daring Jumping Spider) or a Parson Spider.
No a jumping spider can kill a black widow. A jumping spider killed our huge black widow that killed another spider.
I believe its a jumping spider
Jumping Spider lives in the rain forest BIG ZERO! In my mentors car i saw a jumping spider n in my house there is jumping Spiders
Jumping Spider
One type of spider that is black with green markings is the jumping spider, which is found in North America. They are half an inch in length and can jump very long distances.
The jumping spider family, Salticidae, contains more than 5000 species of jumping spiders. The best way to avoid a jumping spider is to get rid of it, either by catching it with a tissue or using a flyswatter to squish it.