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  2. 8-eyed creature — with personality like ‘Satan’ — discovered ...

    www.aol.com/8-eyed-creature-personality-satan...

    In the mountains of Ecuador lurked an eight-eyed creature with a “bad temperament.” When scientists encountered the hairy animal, they discovered its bristly personality — and a new species.

  3. 8-eyed creature — with personality like 'Satan' — discovered. → 'Ghost'-like creature with 'ample' genitalia found at power plant. → 'Cryptic' 3-foot-long creature found in mangroves ...

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  5. Araneus mitificus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Araneus_mitificus

    The spider does not rest on the center of the web, but instead builds a silk-lined sanctuary in a leaf at the margins. [1] The leaf is bent at the edges and roofed with a mesh of silk. If a prey animal becomes entangled in the web, the vibrations from its struggle travel to the center of the web, then along a single long strand of silk (the ...

  6. Caponiidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caponiidae

    Caponiidae is a family of ecribellate haplogyne spiders that are unusual in a number of ways. They differ from other spiders in lacking book lungs and having the posterior median spinnerets anteriorly displaced to form a transverse row with the anterior lateral spinnerets.

  7. Caponia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caponia

    Caponia, also called eight-eyed orange lungless spiders, is an Afrotropical genus of araneomorph spiders in the family Caponiidae, first described by Eugène Simon in 1887. [2] As the common name implies, these spiders have a tightly arranged set of eight eyes, as opposed to the related two-eyed genus Diploglena , and breathe using two pairs of ...

  8. Symphytognathidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symphytognathidae

    8 genera, 73 species Symphytognathidae is a family of spiders with 90 [ 1 ] described species in eight genera. They occur in the tropics of Central and South America and the Australian region (with Oceania ).

  9. Spider vision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_vision

    In six-eyed species, it is always the principal eyes which are absent. [2] [5] The secondary eyes normally have a light-reflecting layer, the tapetum, that makes the eyes appear pale. [6] The tapetum differs considerably between spider families but can be separated into three main types: PT (primitive type), CT (canoe type), and GT (grate type ...