black widow
No this isn't a black widow...their red or orange markings are on the Spiders belly since Black widows hang under their webs. The best guess is a jumping spider if the markings are visible when the spider is walking around.
The Australian Redback Widow is the exception to the rule, it's markings as it's name implies on on the back.
Two examples of striped animals are the zebra, known for its iconic black and white stripes, and the chipmunk, which has distinct stripes down its back.
A ladybird spider is a spider whose red body has four black dots.Specifically, the spider in question can be found natively in Greece. It carries the scientific names Eresus cinnaberinus and E. sandaliatus. It has white-striped black legs. Its fused head and thorax (prosoma) is black. Its abdomen-like rear (opisthosoma) is red, with 4 black dots.
No, the magnetic stripes on the ocean floor form due to the alignment of magnetic minerals in the crust as it solidifies from the mantle. The oceanic crust is eventually consumed in subduction zones and recycled back into the mantle, but the magnetic stripes themselves do not sink back into the mantle.
Crab spiders are white as adult females. The arachnids in question can be all white or yellow, with the color changing in accord with ambush hunting and environmental niche needs. The goldenrod crab spider (Misumena vatia) is a stunning example of such an arachnid coloration in North American species.
Black Is Back was created in 2007.
The spider with two black stripes on its back is commonly known as the zebra spider.
The distinguishing feature of a brown spider with black stripes on its back is the pattern of black stripes that are visible on its body.
The distinguishing feature of a brown spider with two black stripes on its back is the presence of the two distinct black stripes running along its body.
The identifying feature of a brown spider with two black stripes is the presence of two distinct black stripes running down its back.
red back spider
The zebra spider has stripes on its back.
The spider with two stripes on its back is commonly known as the zebra spider.
grass spider
The spider you are referring to is likely the brown recluse spider, which is known for its brown coloration and dark violin-shaped marking on its back.
It's probably the violin spider. That's just a guess.
The distinguishing feature of a spider with two brown stripes on its back is the presence of those two distinct brown stripes running along its back.
The spider you are describing sounds like a grass spider (Agelenopsis), which is typically gray with two distinct black stripes running along its back. These spiders are commonly found in grassy and wooded areas and are known for building funnel-shaped webs to catch their prey.