Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
Jumping spiders have very good eyes and can see well.
Like other jumping spiders, it does not build a web.
"The little jumping spiders are kind of cool," he added.
Most jumping spiders can jump several times the length of their bodies.
These species of minute (c. 2 mm long) jumping spiders are very similar to each other.
Some jumping spiders may run away from approaching humans, and others seem not to be very much afraid.
Jumping spiders have large forelegs and short, powerful back legs.
Most jumping spiders walk throughout the day, so that they maximize their chances of a catch.
On the other hand jumping spiders' secondary eyes have no tapeta.
When disturbed, some jumping spiders usually run away quickly and leap if chased.
Because they have very good eyes, jumping spiders can see human beings when they approach.
Some jumping spiders are known to use image defocus to judge depth.
Hence this variant is poor at catching other jumping spiders.
Jumping spiders have such good eyes that they will usually watch any human who tries to watch them.
In most jumping spiders the main eyes focus accurately on an object up to about 75 centimetres away.
Jumping spiders are generally recognized by their eye pattern.
Jumping spiders use their vision in complex visual courtship displays.
Unlike typical jumping spiders, they do not make nightly web shelters.
The main pair of eyes in jumping spiders even sees in colors.
Jumping spiders make little silken "tents" for themselves to sleep in.
Jumping spiders are able to see very clearly.
Or they'd kill the men high on the hillside and then come tumbling down the grade like jumping spiders.
Jumping spiders, on the other hand, stalk their prey or perhaps stay hidden and wait for it to pass close by.
Bocus is a genus of jumping spiders with three described species.
These are believed to be basal jumping spiders, outside the Salticoida.
None of these families however, has eyes that resemble those of the Salticidae.
Salticus peckhamae is a species of spider from a Salticidae family.
This makes Linyphiidae the second largest family of spiders after the Salticidae.
Some Salticidae specialise in particular classes of prey.
Phidippus is a genus in the family Salticidae (jumping spiders).
Saitis annae is a species of jumping spider in the Salticidae family.
Phlegra bresnieri is a species of 'jumping spiders' belonging to the family Salticidae.
Some of the most surprising hunting behaviour occurs among the araneophagous Salticidae, and it varies greatly in method.
Necatia is a taxon given to a genus of the jumping spider family Salticidae.
Menemerus bivittatus is a spider in the Salticidae family commonly known as the gray wall jumper.
Jumping spiders belong to the family Salticidae.
The hunting behaviour of the Salticidae is confusingly varied compared to that of most spiders in other families.
In hunting, Salticidae also use their silk for a tether to enable them to reach prey that otherwise would be inaccessible.
Learning and discrimination of colored papers in jumping spiders (Araneae, Salticidae).
Asemonea tenuipes is a species of Salticidae (jumping spiders).
Akela is a genus of the spiderfamily Salticidae (jumping spiders), with three described species.
This is demonstrated in the Salticidae subfamily Ballinae.
Capidava (genus) - a spider genus of the Salticidae family, named after the ancient city.
Seismic signals in a courting male jumping spider (Araneae: Salticidae).
Habronattus ophrys is a species of spider from a Salticidae family, that can be found in the United States.
Sitticus distinguendus, sometimes called the distinguished jumper spider, is species of spider in the Salticidae family.
New and little known species of jumping spiders from Zimbabwe (Araneae: Salticidae).
Spiders of the family Salticidae from the upper slopes of Everest and Makalu.
Zygoballus is currently classified in the subfamily Dendryphantinae of the family Salticidae (jumping spiders).
In spite of the length of their front legs, Salticidae depend on their rear legs for jumping.