
Crossed-eye stereos...

A closer view of the pedipalp:

Background info is that this specimen came to me in a pill bottle from my veterinarian's reception area.
The folks there had found it creeping around the floor, recognized only that "it wasn't anything like we have had before in here", and wondered if I could help out.
It took a while but I finally tracked down what I think is a solid ID.
The beast is Dysdera crocata, the "Woodlouse Spider" or "Woodlouse Hunter" because of its common prey. Wikipedia has an article on it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodlouse_spider . The map there seems a little out of date, since other sources say that this spider thrives all along the west coast, British Columbia to California. Bugguide.com has quite a few pictures of the beast, for example https://bugguide.net/node/view/1568301/bgimage which shows the distinctive pedipalp, and many more images beginning at https://bugguide.net/node/view/3387/bgimage .
Specific features relative to the ID include six eyes in a tight grouping, four (versus the more common two) respiratory slits on the underside of the abdomen (not shown here), gigantic chelicerae (jaws), and a distinctive structure for the pedipalps (male sex organs -- highly modified mouthparts).
This species is considered innocuous to humans. Its jaws are large enough to deliver a painful bite, with possible swelling and itching, but the toxin doesn't work on people.
Photographic info: Illumination by two Ikea Jansjö lamps diffused through two-ply Kleenex tissue. Nikon D800E, full frame mode, large fine JPEG (36 megapixels). 50 mm f/2.8 Schneider-Kreuznach Componon S, reversed, at the half-stop between f/4 and f/5.6. Magnification on sensor about 3X, uncropped field width 11.55 mm. Area shown in first image is about 8.7 mm wide. Focus stacked from 205 frames, 0.05 mm step size. The first image is done by Zerene Stacker Batch > Slabbing at 10 frames/slab using PMax, followed by DMap of the slab outputs and minimal retouching from PMax to remove halos. The stereo pairs are effectively +-2.2%, made by PMax from the original source images, every 3rd frame. Stereo cropping by StereoPhoto Maker.
I hope something in here is interesting!
--Rik
Edit: URL glitch