By the ExoPetGuides Team | Jumping Spider Enclosure A jumping spider needs an enclosure that is at least 3 to 5 times its diagonal leg...
A jumping spider needs a vertical, well-ventilated arboreal enclosure sized 4 to 12 times the spider’s diagonal leg span in height, with cross-flow ventilation...
Keeping a jumping spider enclosure clean is one of the simplest parts of spider husbandry, but neglecting it produces problems that are disproportionately dangerous...
Platycryptus undatus, the tan jumping spider, is one of the most commonly encountered jumping spiders across eastern North America and a quietly excellent pet...
Identifying a jumping spider reliably comes down to one feature: the eye pattern. Family Salticidae contains roughly 6,950 described species across about 695 genera,...
Hyllus diardi, commonly called the heavy jumping spider, giant jumping spider, or eyelash jumping spider, is the largest readily available jumping spider in the...
Phidippus audax, commonly called the bold jumping spider or daring jumping spider, is the most widely distributed large jumping spider in North America and...
Phidippus regius, the regal jumping spider, is the single most popular jumping spider species in the pet hobby. Native to the southeastern United States,...
Jumping spiders (family Salticidae) are the largest family of spiders on Earth, with more than 6,700 described species across roughly 700 genera, on every...
Jumping spiders are one of the fastest-growing categories in the exotic pet hobby, with online marketplaces like MorphMarket listing over 400 active jumping spider...