Salticidae (Jumping Spiders) - 3 to 15mm
Short legs with 2 claws at the tip of each tarsus
8 eyes arranged in 3 rows;
1st row - largest pair facing forward,
2nd row - small pair facing forward,
3rd row - 2 pair facing upward.
Have the sharpest vision of all spiders
Create silken drag lines
Do not spin webs but rather make silken shelters
Thomisidae (Crab Spiders) - 1.5 to 10mm
2nd pair of legs often larger then 3rd and 4th pair with 2
claws at the tip of each tarsus
8 eyes on raied bumps arranged in 2 curved rows of 4
Do not spin webs; females make silken egg sacks & some males tie down their mate
Dictynoidea
Dictynidae - <5mm, most: 2 to 3mm
Have sievelike spinning plates (cribellum), in front of spinnerets
Cribella also found by eyes and feet
3 microscopic claws on feet
8 eyes in 2 rows - 6 white eyes and 2 dark eyes, or just 6 white eyes
Some have fairly large jaws and poison glands
Spin irregular webs
Lycosidae (Wolf Spiders) - 3 to 35mm
8 eyes of unequal size arranged into 3 rows; 1st row having 4 eyes
Do not spin webs; some dig their own burrows
Females make silken egg sacks which they carry around with them until they hatch
Spiderlings cling to their mothers back until they are ready to disperse
Oxiopidae (Lynx Spiders) - 4 to 16mm
Legs have prominent spines and 3 claws on the tip of each tarsus
Many have an abdomen that tapers to a point
8 eyes; 6 of which form a hexagon and 2 smaller eyes facing forward
Do not spin webs or dig burrows
Their egg sacks are attached to plants
Drag lines are used to catch prey
Often rest on hind legs with front legs raised
Ctenidae (Wandering Spiders) - 5 to 40mm
8 eyes arranged in 3 rows;
1st row has 2 eyes,
2nd row has 4 eyes,
3rd row has 2 eyes that are widely separated.
Do not spin webs and some live in burrows
Pisauridae (Nursery Web Spiders, Fishing Spiders) - 7 to 26mm
Legs have 3 claws on each tarsus
8 eyes arranged in 2 rows; 1st row in a straight line & the other in a U-shape
Do not spin webs to catch prey but make a silken nest for their young
Araneidae (Orb Weavers) - 2 to 28mm
Females are generaly larger then males; Some males have clasping
spines on their legs
8 eyes arranged in 2 horizontal rows of 4
Most have a spiraling orbed web radiating from a center point connected to surrounding
structures
Males commonly design their webs arround a females web
Tetragnathidae (Long-jawed Orb Weavers) - 3 to 9mm
Apart from the average orb weaver they have unusually large jaws
Theridiidae (Comb-footed Spiders, Cobweb Weavers, Black Widows, etc.)
Loxoscelidae (Violin Spiders) - 6 to 11mm
Known for their poisonous venom; Those bitten have wounds that don't
heal quickly & often become ill.
Legs have 2 claws on the tip of each tarsus
6 eyes arranged into 3 pairs
Dysderidae (Woodlouse Hunter / Slater-eating Spider)
6 eyes arranged into 2 rows; 1st row having 2 eyes
Scytodidae (Spitting Spiders) - <9mm
Spitting gland on the part where legs attach to body
(cephalothorax)
Can spit a sticky secretion up to 22mm
6 eyes in 3 groups
Most live under debris or stones