White Crab Spider
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All crab spiders generally resemble crabs: Their legs extend outward from the sides, and they can walk in any direction. Most live in flowers and capture prey simply by grabbing and biting it.
The whitebanded crab spider is small and whitish yellow or yellowish brown. Often its carapace is slightly greenish, with a broad whitish-yellow midband bordered by darker, thinner sides of yellowish brown. Its eye region may be marked with red, and its legs are uniformly cream colored. An unmarked abdomen is not unusual, but more typically it is marked with a brownish-yellow V, converging toward the carapace and made up of various spots or stripes.
Like a chameleon, this spider often changes color to blend with its surroundings. Thousands of tiny crab spiderlings lie concealed in spring and summer flowers, waiting to capture insects with their powerful forelegs.
This species is sometimes called the ridge-faced flower spider because of a small white or yellowish ridge on the spider’s tiny “face,” below its eight eyes. Because this ridge is often white, the other common name is "whitebanded."
Size
Length (not including legs): Females about ¼ to nearly ½ inch; males are less than ⅛ inch.
Food
Insects such as bees and flies, plus other spiders (especially other crab spiders) make up a large portion of the diet. Crab spiders don't build webs to net their prey; instead, they wait quietly on flowers and ambush insects — simply grabbing and biting them — as they come for nectar and pollen. Sometimes you can find crab spiders by looking for bees and butterflies that are dangling oddly from flowers, as the crab spider is eating them.