Online Encyclopedia

HARVESTER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 41 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

HARVESTER  ,

HARVEST-SPIDER, Or HARVEST-MAN, names given to Arachnids of the order Opiliones, referable to various
See also:
species of the
See also:
family Phalangiidae . Harvest-
See also:
spiders or harvest-men, so-called on account of their abundance in the
See also:
late summer and early autumn, may be at once distinguished from all true spiders by the extreme length and thinness of their legs, and by the small
See also:
size and spherical or oval shape of the
See also:
body, which is not divided by a
See also:
waist or constriction into an anterior and a posterior region . They may be met with in houses, back yards, fields, woods and heaths; either climbing on walls,
See also:
running over the grass, or lurking under stones and fallen tree trunks . They are predaceous, feeding upon small
See also:
insects, mites and spiders . The
See also:
males are smaller than the
See also:
females, and often differ from them in certain well-marked secondary sexual characters, such as the mandibular protuberance from which one of the
See also:
common
See also:
English spiders, Phalangium cornutum, takes its scientific name . The male is also furnished with a long and protrusible penis, and the
See also:
female with an equally long and protrusible ovipositor . The sexes pair in the autumn, and the female, by means of her ovipositor,
See also:
lays her eggs in some cleft or hole in the
See also:
soil and leaves them to their
See also:
fate . After breeding, the parents die with the autumn cold; but the eggs retain their vitality through the winter and hatch with the warmth of spring and early summer, the young gradually attaining maturity as the latter seasonprogresses . Hence the prevalence of adult individuals in the late summer and autumn, and at no other time of the
See also:
year . They are provided with a pair of glands, situated one on each side of the carapace, which secrete an evil-smelling fluid believed to be protective in nature . Harvest-men are very widely distributed and are especially abundant in temperate countries of the a, Ocular tubercle. d, Sheath of penis protruded . b, Mandible e, Penis .

c,

Labrum (upper lip). f, The glans .
See also:
northern hemisphere . They are also, however, common in India, where they are well known for their habit of adhering together in
See also:
great masses, comparable to a swarm of bees, and of swaying gently backwards and forwards . The long legs of harvest-men serve them not only as
See also:
organs of rapid locomotion, but also as props to raise the body well off the ground, thus enabling the animals to stalk unmolested from the midst of an army of raiding ants . (R . I .

End of Article: HARVESTER
[back]
HARVEST (A.S. hcerfest " autumn," O.H. Ger. herbist...
[next]
HARVEY

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.