


Image 1
An overall view of the cephalothorax exoskeleton including the chelicerae and fangs.
There is no spider here, just the remains of its former exoskeleton. The view is similar to seeing a live spider from above but the chelicera have been raised up at a 90 degree angle. After popping off the carapace cover, the spider has pulled its legs clear of the 8 openings without disrupting the old exoskeleton features.
The two rear leg openings appear slightly cut off at the top of the image. The opening above the chelicerae mold is where the carapace (seen in detail in the previous post) was located. Now instead we see the underside of the sternum, the center of the cephalothorax complex.
Leitz 2.5x Plan Achromat, 35 images at .005 inch increments.
Image 2
Details of the exterior view of the chelicerae with of course a good view of the now discarded fangs.
Leitz 4x Plan Fluorite 50 images at .002 inch increments.
Image 3
A rear leg mold that cracked off while working with the whole exoskeleton. The image provides some idea of how thin the discarded exoskeleton is.
Leitz 4x Plan Fluorite 24 images at .002 inch increments.
Leitz Ortholux microscope
4X Leitz projection eyepiece plus 1/3x relay lens
Canon 50D
Zerene PMax stacking.
Processing in Photoshop, Bibble Pro5
If replacing your whole face including the skin of your eyes isn’t strange enough this installment shows that the spider also gets new legs, palpi and even the jaws or chelicerae. How it extracts its chelicerae, keeping the entire assembly intact is simply amazing.
I can only imagine how difficult it must be to extract yourself from these closefitting copies of your external self. My only similar situation would be the equivalent of pulling off elbow length rubber gloves. However, I have read that a molting fluid is somehow excreted between the two surfaces.
This spider accomplishes this extraction without breaking much, if any of its former exoskeleton. A nice short review of this process can be read on the web site HowStuffWorks ”Spider Molting: the Exoskeleton”.
Walt