Wolf spiders are large, with
a 1 inch (25 mm) body length; like tarantulas, they live in
burrows. Wolf spider burrows can be differentiated from tarantula
burrows by the turret of silk and twigs that extends
vertically from the wolf spider’s hole. The wolf spider can be
from gray to dark brown with distinctive peach or orange
coloration on the front of the chelicerae.
This particular species of
wolf spider is found throughout the
United States
in habitats ranging from desertscrub
to woodlands.
These spiders are most often
found in Arizona Upland habitat, where their burrows are quite
conspicuous. They are typically active from March through October,
when their green eye shine can be easily seen as they cross roads
at night. The eye shine is caused by a tapetum
in the eye which reflects light rays back through the eye retina
and probably enhances the spider’s night vision. Wolf spiders
are primarily nocturnal predators and are rarely seen during the
day.
Wolf spiders are expert and
vigorous hunters. Adult males can be found wandering throughout
the summer rainy season, presumably searching for mates. The male
must give the female appropriate signals when he finds her, to
avoid being perceived as a threat. He does this by tapping his
legs in a particular fashion. He also drums with his palps,
and in a procedure called stridulation,
he produces sounds by scraping the palp
against itself. After the female lays eggs, she carries the egg
case with her wherever she goes, attached to her spinnerets.
Sometimes she suns the egg case, sticking her rump, with egg case
attached, outside the burrow entrance. The spiderlings
hatch after about a month and climb onto the mother’s back,
holding onto specialized hairs. After another month, they
disperse, sometimes by ballooning. A female wolf spider may live
up to 2 years.
