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I was trying to tickle one of these out with no luck.
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I was trying to tickle one of these out with no luck.
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I didn't actually see the spider, but the clearness of the turret leads me to believe it was in use.
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California Turret Spider (Antrodiaetus riversi; a member of foldingdoor spiders; Family Antrodiaetidae) - Lookout Ridge, Anthony Chabot Regional Park, Alameda County, California - March 2014
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AM
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GAH
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Sex: Female Size: 3.5cm Out wandering on a cool day (>10C). Found on leaf litter in a clearing of a patch of Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) and Burr oak trees (Quercus macrocarpa) between a prairie and a wetland. Burrow was located and photographed.
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Sex: Female Size: 3.5cm Out wandering on a cool day (>10C). Found on leaf litter in a clearing of a patch of Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) and Burr oak trees (Quercus macrocarpa) between a prairie and a wetland. Burrow was located and photographed.
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Sex: Female Size: 3.5cm Out wandering on a cool day (>10C). Found on leaf litter in a clearing of a patch of Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) and Burr oak trees (Quercus macrocarpa) between a prairie and a wetland. Burrow was located and photographed.
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Very small mygal found under logs in the spruce-fir forest. No obvious sign of burrows, sheet webs, etc.
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Sex: Female Size: 3.5cm Out wandering on a cool day (>10C). Found on leaf litter in a clearing of a patch of Hackberry (Celtis occidentalis) and Burr oak trees (Quercus macrocarpa) between a prairie and a wetland. Burrow was located and photographed.
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Very small mygal found under logs in the spruce-fir forest. No obvious sign of burrows, sheet webs, etc.
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Very small mygal found under logs in the spruce-fir forest. No obvious sign of burrows, sheet webs, etc.
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Photographed with my partner Dr Fred Coyle, the extraordinary gentleman who revised the genus! That's pretty cool...
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