Working for the future to protect our coastal dune system, fauna and wildlife
Peacock Spider Group
By Carole Anderson - BCCG Member & Group SponsorI must first explain that I am only an amateur on spiders and have only recently taken up the interest so am prepared to stand corrected but it was I who collected specimens of this species for Jurgen Otto to take back to Sydney so as they could be described and given a name. I have also been taking photos of them at every opportunity and I have discovered that this particular species seems to be around for most of the year where as some of the others are only found in spring.Maratus flavus ( flavus meaning yellow in Latin) - and otherwise known as Colonel Mustard - is the name given to the Peacock Spider that is described in Peckhamia 160.1 by J C Otto and D E Hill and is unique to this area of the South-west of Western Australia known as Tims Thicket. It is important to preserve this area as it may be the only place in the world that this species exists.This is the area in Tims Thicket where Maratus flavus is found:
Males are only about 4mm and females about 5mm. They are found in leaf litter and on small green plants not very tall in height. They feed on small live insects and catch them by jumping on them. They do not build webs like other spiders. In late winter into spring the male displays (dances) to the female to get her approval to mate. It can go on for quite awhile before she lets him. The female makes a nest of silk and lays her eggs in a small silk cocoon and the spiderlings take about 4-5 weeks to emerge. She stays in the nest with the eggs until they hatch and does not eat in that time.All species of Peacock Spider are only found in Australia and to date there are 70 different species of which most are in Western Australia and over half of them in the South-west of the state.Maratus flavus has been photographed by others before me but had never been described (named) until February 2018.
Working for the future to protect our coastal dune system, fauna and wildlife
Peacock Spider Group
By Carole Anderson - BCCG Member & Group SponsorI must first explain that I am only an amateur on spiders and have only recently taken up the interest so am prepared to stand corrected but it was I who collected specimens of this species for Jurgen Otto to take back to Sydney so as they could be described and given a name. I have also been taking photos of them at every opportunity and I have discovered that this particular species seems to be around for most of the year where as some of the others are only found in spring.Maratus flavus ( flavus meaning yellow in Latin) - and otherwise known as Colonel Mustard - is the name given to the Peacock Spider that is described in Peckhamia 160.1 by J C Otto and D E Hill and is unique to this area of the South-west of Western Australia known as Tims Thicket. It is important to preserve this area as it may be the only place in the world that this species exists.This is the area in Tims Thicket where Maratus flavus is found:
Males are only about 4mm and females about 5mm. They are found in leaf litter and on small green plants not very tall in height. They feed on small live insects and catch them by jumping on them. They do not build webs like other spiders. In late winter into spring the male displays (dances) to the female to get her approval to mate. It can go on for quite awhile before she lets him. The female makes a nest of silk and lays her eggs in a small silk cocoon and the spiderlings take about 4-5 weeks to emerge. She stays in the nest with the eggs until they hatch and does not eat in that time.All species of Peacock Spider are only found in Australia and to date there are 70 different species of which most are in Western Australia and over half of them in the South-west of the state.Maratus flavus has been photographed by others before me but had never been described (named) until February 2018.