Nature Is Brutal

Have you ever had the experience of noticing something for the first time, and then seeing it everywhere as if it had never been there before?  This happens to me all the time when I am out on the trails.  Most recently it happened with spiders, Goldenrod Crab Spiders to be specific.  I saw what I thought was a dead moth on bright yellow flower petal and took a picture of it.  Later while reviewing my images from the day I saw why the moth was dead, a large yellow spider was dining on it.  The spiders yellow body blended in so well with the yellow of the flower that it was almost impossible to see, until you noticed it was there then it became obvious.  Turns out these are hunting spiders, they can be either white or yellow and they sit in a flower waiting for a pollenator to come along and then they pounce.  Once I realized what I had found I spotted them in some of my other photos which I had thought were only of a nice flower.  These spiders are so fascinating I decided to start looking for them more actively while out hiking.  On my next trip out to the Indiana Dunes I choose a trail which I knew would be rich in yellow and white wild flowers.  Sure enough I found dozens of them along the trail, at least half already having captured a pollenator and chowing down, which makes them much easier to spot.  When it is just the spider lying in wait, they are almost impossible to see, even when you are looking for them.

If you think about it, it really is a brutal world out there.  Sudden death lurking in the midst of such beautiful wild flowers.  Each of the following images has a Goldenrod Crab Spider in it, some of them might be difficult to spot.  But they are there, lurking, waiting, hungry…

On first glance this may look like a photograph of a yellow wild flower. But look carefully at the bottom of the central disk. The reddish coloration on the forelegs make this one stand out better than most of the ones I’ve come across which are solid yellow.

In this image, taken on the Tolleston Dunes trail, you get a really good look at the eyes and mandibles of these beauties. Kinda looks like it is doing yoga, but it is really waiting for some insect to approach the flower and then those forelegs will spring like a bear trap and then it is all over for the prey.

Trap set and ready to spring…

Although most of the Goldenrod Crab Spiders I see are yellow, white is their natural color. Knowing that will help you locate the spider in this purple flower.

Once you realize how these things operate, you learn to key in on suspiciously stationary insects. Although the crab spider in this image is really difficult to spot, the bumble bee that was just lying there was a dead giveaway.

This image really shows how easy it is to just walk by these guys. He is pretty much dead center in the photograph. You can really see how a bee or moth would simply never notice until it was too late.

The bumblebee gives a solid que to how large these spiders are. The size of their legs and bodies is impressive.

Without the black insect in its jaws, this one would have been almost impossible to spot among the stamen in the center of the flower.

By the size of the prey I would say this one is just working on an appetizer while awaiting something bigger and meatier to come along.

This was a pretty unusual case of a yellow bodied spider on a white flower. He must have relocated recently as it can take a week or more for their bodies to change color from yellow to white. He still got his meal though.

Once you get accustomed to seeing them, this is the most common pose when not feeding.

I’ve cropped in a lot on this image, but you can clearly see it in the middle.

Most of the white ones I have found are on blue or purple flowers which tend to have white parts near the center. The tips of this guy’s legs give him away.

This was the image that started it all. I only saw the moth when I took the photo and it was only later, when I was reviewing my images on a large monitor that I noticed that bulbous yellow body.

Seeing – Hidden Beauty

Analogous to the way in which you can train your eye to see nature in new and different ways while out hiking through a forrest, birefringent crystals hold within themselves an inherent beauty which is not difficult to see once you learn how to look.  It is quite amazing how dramatically the appearance of a simple sugar crystal changes when viewed through crossed polarizers as the following before and after images illustrate.  Each pair of photographs are of the exact same part of a sugar crystal taken through a microscope with a magnification of about 50x.  The only difference is that the before photos are taken with unpolarized light while the after images are taken with the addition of a pair of polarizers.  The colors which appear in the cross polarized images are all produced by nature, they are not computer generated nor are have they been enhanced, you would see these same colors if you looked through the microscope eye piece with your eye instead of the camera.  There is an incredible amount of beauty in nature, but often we need to learn how to see in order to observe it.

As with all of the images on my site you can click on them to see them full size.

If you are wondering what cross polarization microphotography is, this post is my attempt to describe how these images are created.