Misumenoides formosipes (crab spider) According to "Spiderman" Brian Carroll, this flower crab spider cannot change its color like a chameleon. He performed an experiment and disproved the myth that this spider can change to white or cream if placed on a white flower. What he did discover, however, is that if a yellow crab spider lays her eggs on a white-flowered plant, her offspring will be white, not yellow. Furthermore, if a white crab spider lays her eggs on a yellow-flowered plant her offspring will be yellow, not white.
This isn't much info and someone may expand on this anwser, but his spider might be reconized by the name of a Black and Yellow Argiope.
That is a garden spider
From the description, this sounds like an Arrowshaped Micrathena spider. It's a variety of the orb weaver and is known for its bright colors and spikes.
A Garden Spider
A black spotted yellow spider that just ate a gumball.
This isn't much info and someone may expand on this anwser, but his spider might be reconized by the name of a Black and Yellow Argiope.
It is the marbled golden orb weaver.
That is a garden spider
From the description, this sounds like an Arrowshaped Micrathena spider. It's a variety of the orb weaver and is known for its bright colors and spikes.
Garden spider
Arachnic
a garden spider
maybe it's a black widow?
Easy, a yellow hair-legged spider.
No idea! ermm... a snake.
Without knowing the size of the spider and where it was found, itÕs hard to know for sure what kind of a spider it is. It may be a black and yellow garden spider or a common orb weaver
A Garden Spider