The male green jumping spider has a dark red head and a bright green body. The scientific name for this spider is Mopsus Mormon.
Spiders with brown stripe legs and a green body could potentially be orb-weaver spiders like Araneus gemmoides, which has a greenish abdomen and brown-striped legs. Another possibility is a green lynx spider (Peucetia viridans) which has green coloration and may have some brown on the legs. However, additional information or a photo would be helpful for a more precise identification.
A snowdrop spider is a small, black spider that has a distinctive white or pale marking on its abdomen resembling a snowdrop flower. It is also known as the "ghost spider" due to its appearance.
belinda look like a green frog who eats flies called emma!
The Two Step Spider, or Jockey Spider, is actually a reference to the Redback Spider which is indigenous to Australia. They look much like a Black Widow with an hourglass underbelly but the females also have a red stripe across the backside. -Joe There is a spider that can turn into a banana but no two step spider.
I think it's actually called the black & yellow garden spider.
It is a spider
so that people can look at something beautiful like a garden
Yes, a wolf spider is bigger than a garden spider. If you continue to look into it, you will find that the wolf spider is one of the biggest spiders. Wolf spiders range in size from 0.04 to 1.18 inches in length compared to the Garden Spider that ranges in size from 0.22 to 0.51 inches.
A geranium? Lamb's Ear?
Like a spider...
The male green jumping spider has a dark red head and a bright green body. The scientific name for this spider is Mopsus Mormon.
The Green Frog. I am not kidding at all. Look it up.
There are some spiders that resemble grasshoppers, such as the green lynx spider and the spiny orb-weaver spider. These spiders have body shapes and colors that can make them look similar to grasshoppers at first glance.
gross.... that is what they look like
The violent spider is brown,and leggy
The only spider I have seen like this was a common sight in Kimberley South Africa. We called it a button spider because its back look like a button. It was not a black widow and it was not orange and did not have the hourglass marking that is common with the black or brown widow - also called the button spider.