Cosmophasis umbratica

      Cosmophasis umbratica
      Two Cosmophasis umbratica males in contest.
      Scientific classification
      Kingdom: Animalia
      Phylum: Arthropoda
      Class: Arachnida
      Order: Araneae
      Family: Salticidae
      Subfamily: Heliophaninae
      Genus: Cosmophasis
      Species: C. umbratica
      Binomial name
      Cosmophasis umbratica
      Simon, 1903
      Species

      see text

      Cosmophasis umbratica is a species of jumping spider that occurs from India to Sumatra.

      They are most frequently spotted on plants that are exposed to sunlight during later morning and early afternoon.[1]

      Males have complex iridescent markings on the dorsal and lateral cephalothorax and on the lateral femora of all legs, and silvery white lines on the abdomen, while females have a green cephalothorax and a brown, white and black abdomen.[1]

      C. umbratica shows extreme dimorphism when viewed under UV light: males reflect UV on all body parts that are displayed during intraspecific interaction, while females and juveniles do not reflect UV at all. It seems that C. umbratica uses this in sexual signaling. A similar phenomenon is found in some butterflies (for example, several species of Colias and Gonepteryx, both of the family Pieridae).[1]

      Footnotes

      1. ^ a b c Lim & Li, 2005
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      References

      • Lim, M.L.M. & Li, D. (2005). Extreme ultraviolet sexual dimorphism in jumping spiders (Araneae: Salticidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 89: 397-406. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8312.2006.00704.x (with photographs)
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      External links

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      Last modified on 23 April 2013, at 12:52