
Female Dimorphic Jumper (Maevia inclemens) Overwintering in Sac - Emerging
I found a bunch of little silk sacs dangling from rotting wood. I didn't know what they were, and I'm sorry to say that I poked (gently) one. Well, it started to wiggle and then a spider popped out of the sac. Then, another spider popped out of a different sac. I felt really bad disturbing their winter respite, but I didn't expect the silk sac inhabitants to wake up and emerge. Hopefully they do okay.
Dimorphic Jumpers have two male forms: the first has a black body, pale yellow legs, and three small tufts of black hair on the cephalothorax; the second form has a grayish body with red, white, and black markings. The females resemble the second form with faint V-shaped markings and a paler abdomen. This one is a female.
Habitat: Deciduous forest.