This Goldenrod Crab Spider is waiting patiently on an Oxeye Daisy for a fly, bee, wasp, butterfly, etc. to join it for dinner. :) These spiders can change color from white to yellow to light green depending on the color of the plant they are hunting on. 40D, Canon 180 f/3.5 macro, 1/20, f/22, ISO 320, tripod, cable release, macro twin flash set at 1/8 power. Comments are welcome.
This is really outstanding, Steve. Big bonus with his legs up and pollen on the ends! Wow! The only thing I can think of to suggest on this is possibly a little CCW rotation to put him dead center/top but it sure isn't bothering me the way it is.
Lovely image. For...you know. A spider. :eek:;):eek:
Thanks everyone for your comments. I thought I would clarify some of the biology for folks who are not familiar with this species. Although it certainly looks like the spider is eating pollen in this image, they are strictly predatory. They typically sit motionless at the edge of a flower, blending in with their camo colors, with their front legs extended as shown in the photo. When an unsuspecting insect lands on the flower to get nectar or pollen and gets close enough, the spider pounces - and dinner is served. :) These spiders can successfully tackle insects even larger than themselves.
To me, the biggest plus is that the eyes are in focus and have highlights. I would've liked a touch more DOF to bring the foremost legs into focus. I've never noticed them to have pollen on the chelicerae like this.