u/GreenroomsArentGreen

Image 1 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 2 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 3 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 4 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 5 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 6 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 7 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 8 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 9 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
Image 10 — differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california
▲ 2 r/spiders+1 crossposts

differentiating between male and female jumping spiders - central valley california

so I'm doing a photo project and one of the things my professor wanted me to add was captions that let people know what the spiders are below are what I think they are but I want to double check, all of them I photo'd in the central valley of california

1 - An adult female Colonus hesperus

2 - An adult male Bold Jumping

3 - An adult female Colonus hesperus

4 - A Juvenile (i5 maybe) female bold jumping

5 - A Juvenile (i5?) female bold jumping

6 - An adult male bold jumping

7 - An adult male bold jumping

8 - A Juvenile (i6?) female bold

9 - same individual spider as 8

10 - An adult male bold jumping

11 - same individual spider as 10

12 - An adult female bold jumping?
13-14. same individual spider as 12

15 - An adult female bold jumping
16-18. same individual spider as 15

19 - An adult female bold jumping

20 - same individual as 19

u/GreenroomsArentGreen — 2 hours ago
▲ 75 r/spiders

I believe its a total of 4 individuals, 2 of them look the same but they were in different locations (smooth leaves vs jagged leaves). All were very cute and wild.

u/GreenroomsArentGreen — 15 days ago