Phrynarachne decipiens

Sept. 4, 2024

Recently, zoologists in Assam have added a species of spider Phrynarachne decipiens whose web mimics a bird’s excrement to India’s list of arachnids.

About Phrynarachne decipiens:

  • It is better known as the bird dung or bird-dropping crab spider.
  • Distribution: It was known to be distributed in Malaysia and Indonesia’s Java and Sumatra.
  • It has been recorded for the first time in the country from Assam’s Sonapur in the Kamrup (Metropolitan) district and the Chirang Reserve Forest in the Kokrajhar district.
  • The spider is usually seen lying motionless 1-2 ft above the ground on the upper side of broad leaves.
  • The chalky white colour of the spider and whitish deposition (its web) on the leaves, looking like bird excreta, make it very difficult to be sighted
  • Feature: It has the stout spermathecae (a sac-like organ in the female reproductive tract that stores sperm received during copulation) with posterior heads almost touching each other.
    • The genus Phrynarachne presently consists of 35 accepted species of which three – P. ceylonica, P. ceeliana, and P. Tuberosa – before the bird dung crab spider recorded and re-described based on female specimens collected from Assam.

What are arachnids?

  • These are members of the arthropod group that includes spiders, daddy longlegs, scorpions, and the mites and ticks.