If last night I showed a spider Hyllus then tonight is not much different, still about spiders. However, what is interesting is that the Hyllus I showed tonight is female. While the dark-skinned Hyllus spider I showed last night is male. This means that they are a pair of lovers who live side by side. Initially they were in a guava tree, then migrated to a lime tree. Regarding the migration carried out by the pair of lovers, I know from my observations over the past month. Where when I found a male in a guava tree, a month later I found it in an orange tree. The most surprising thing is that the beautiful female Hyllus lives in the orange tree.
There will definitely be questions from friends about how to distinguish between males and females. First; see my post last night, where a male Hyllus spider stands proudly, with black skin and two dark eyes staring sharply. Slightly hairy, not much, tends to be shiny those are very obvious characteristics of a male.
Second; Take a good look at this female Hyllus spider. In stark contrast to the male, this female spider has smooth skin, adorned with white hairs (fringed) like a woman's bag displayed in a clothing store window. In addition to her face, fine hairs also grow on her legs and arms. Her beautiful eyes stare softly, making it clear that she is a female spider, the mate of the dark-skinned male spider.
After completing the photo session that took almost an hour, that afternoon I returned the beautiful female spider to her home in the orange tree. There, the male spider waited anxiously. I prayed that the couple would live in harmony and happiness. Which would later give birth to many cute and adorable baby spiders.
To make their differences clearer, I show their mate, in the picture below!. He is a dark-skinned, stocky,and pointy-footed.