Jumping Spider Symptoms

Browse 45 guides from veterinary sources about jumping spider symptoms.

45 guides

Jumping Spider Abdomen Injury: Rupture, Tear or Impact Trauma

Jumping spider abdomen injury is an emergency. Learn rupture signs, when to see your vet, home care limits, and...

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Jumping Spider Abdomen Turned Dark, Pale or Gray: What Color Changes Mean

A dark, pale, or gray jumping spider abdomen can mean premolt, dehydration, injury, or illness. Learn when to monitor...

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Jumping Spider Bleeding or Fluid Leaking: Injury, Rupture or Bad Molt?

Jumping spider leaking fluid or bleeding? Learn likely causes, urgent warning signs, vet care options, home steps, and...

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Jumping Spider Can't Move Its Legs: Paralysis, Weakness or Bad Molt?

Jumping spider can't move its legs? Learn signs of bad molt, dehydration, injury, and when urgent exotic vet care may...

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Jumping Spider Death Curl: What It Means and When It Is an Emergency

A jumping spider death curl can signal dehydration, heat stress, a bad molt, or dying. Learn when to monitor at home...

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Jumping Spider Diarrhea or Runny Droppings: Causes & When to Act

Runny droppings in jumping spiders can signal stress, overhydration, poor feeders, or illness. Learn causes, red flags,...

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Jumping Spider Egg-Bound or Retaining Eggs: Warning Signs and What to Do

See your vet immediately if your jumping spider strains, collapses, or stays swollen after laying. Learn warning signs,...

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Jumping Spider Eye Injury or Cloudy Eyes: Vision Problems, Trauma & Molt Issues

Cloudy or injured eyes in jumping spiders can signal trauma, a bad molt, or serious vision trouble. Learn when to...

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Jumping Spider Falling: Why It Can't Climb or Stick Properly

Jumping spider falling or losing grip can point to dehydration, molt trouble, injury, or age. Learn when to monitor at...

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Jumping Spider Fluid Around the Face: Mouthpart Discharge, Injury or Infection?

Fluid near a jumping spider’s face can mean prey residue, molting trouble, injury, or infection. Learn red flags, home...

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Jumping Spider Fungal Growth or Mold on the Body: Infection or Shed Debris?

White fuzz on a jumping spider may be shed debris, mold, or infection. Learn urgent warning signs, vet options, home...

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Jumping Spider Gravid: Signs of Pregnancy or Egg Development

Learn how to tell if your jumping spider is gravid, what egg development looks like, when to monitor at home, and when...

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Jumping Spider Hiding All the Time: Stress, Premolt or Something Wrong?

Jumping spider hiding all the time? Learn normal premolt behavior, stress signs, red flags, vet care options, and safe...

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Jumping Spider Holding Its Body or Legs Oddly: What Abnormal Posture Can Mean

A jumping spider holding its legs or body oddly may be molting, dehydrated, injured, or very ill. Learn when to monitor...

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Jumping Spider Laying Eggs: Normal Behavior, Complications & Care

Jumping spider laying eggs is often normal, but dehydration, mold, or weakness can become serious. Learn when to...

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Jumping Spider Legs Curled After Molt: Stuck Shed, Dehydration or Nerve Damage?

Curled legs after a jumping spider molt can mean stuck shed, dehydration, injury, or internal damage. Learn when to...

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Jumping Spider Lethargic: Normal Resting, Molting or Serious Illness?

A lethargic jumping spider may be resting, molting, dehydrated, or seriously ill. Learn red flags, home checks, vet...

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Jumping Spider Limping or Injured Leg: Sprain, Break or Lost Limb?

Jumping spider limping or missing a leg? Learn common causes, when to see your vet, home care, and realistic 2026 US...

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Jumping Spider Losing Weight: Causes of a Shrinking Abdomen

A shrinking jumping spider abdomen can mean dehydration, poor feeding, premolt, or illness. Learn when to monitor at...

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Jumping Spider Missing a Leg: Will It Grow Back and When Is It Serious?

A jumping spider can often adapt to one missing leg, and younger spiders may regrow it over later molts. Learn when to...

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Jumping Spider Mites or Parasites: Tiny Bugs on Your Spider or in the Enclosure

Tiny bugs in a jumping spider enclosure may be harmless springtails or a true parasite. Learn when to monitor, clean,...

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Jumping Spider Mouthparts Look Damaged: Can It Still Eat?

Damaged or dark jumping spider mouthparts may be molt-related or traumatic. Learn when your spider can still eat, when...

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Jumping Spider Not Drinking: Dehydration Signs, Causes & Care

Jumping spider not drinking? Learn dehydration signs, common husbandry causes, when to see your vet, home care steps,...

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Jumping Spider Not Eating After Laying Eggs: Normal Maternal Behavior or Decline?

A jumping spider may stop eating while guarding eggs for 2-4 weeks, but dehydration, collapse, or a shriveled abdomen...

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Jumping Spider Not Eating: Causes, When to Worry & What to Do

Jumping spider not eating? Learn common causes, warning signs, when to see your vet, home care steps, and realistic...

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Jumping Spider Not Jumping: Weakness, Vision Problems or Normal Variation?

Jumping spider not jumping? Learn normal rest vs warning signs, likely causes, when to see your vet, home care steps,...

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Jumping Spider Not Making a Hammock or Web: Stress, Humidity or Illness?

A jumping spider that stops making a hammock may be stressed, too dry, nearing molt, or ill. Learn what to monitor,...

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Jumping Spider Not Moving: Is It Molting, Resting or Dying?

A jumping spider that is not moving may be molting, stressed, dehydrated, chilled, or dying. Learn urgent warning...

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Jumping Spider Not Pooping: Normal Variation or a Sign of Trouble?

A jumping spider that is not pooping may be in premolt, underfed, or dehydrated. Learn when to monitor, when to see...

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Jumping Spider Not Responsive: How to Tell Shock, Molt, Torpor or Death

A jumping spider that will not move may be molting, chilled, dehydrated, in shock, or dead. Learn urgent warning signs,...

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Jumping Spider Old Age Signs: Slowing Down, Appetite Changes and End-of-Life Care

Learn common old age signs in jumping spiders, when appetite loss is normal, when to see your vet, and how to provide...

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Jumping Spider Overheated: Signs of Heat Stress and Emergency Cooling

See your vet immediately if your jumping spider is overheated. Learn heat stress signs, safe emergency cooling, vet...

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Jumping Spider Overweight: Signs of Overfeeding and Safer Feeding Schedules

Learn signs your jumping spider may be overfed, when to see your vet, and safer feeding schedules to support healthy...

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Jumping Spider Poisoned: Signs of Pesticide, Cleaner or Fume Exposure

See your vet immediately if your jumping spider may be poisoned. Learn signs of pesticide, cleaner, or fume exposure,...

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Jumping Spider Regurgitating or Drooling: Mouthpart Problems, Stress or Toxins?

Jumping spider drooling or regurgitating can signal mouthpart injury, stress, dehydration, or toxin exposure. Learn...

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Jumping Spider Seizure-Like Movements: What Causes Jerking or Flipping?

Jumping spider jerking or flipping can signal dehydration, toxin exposure, injury, or a bad molt. Learn when to monitor...

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Jumping Spider Small Abdomen: Hungry, Dehydrated or Sick?

A small jumping spider abdomen can mean hunger, dehydration, premolt, or illness. Learn when to monitor at home and...

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Jumping Spider Staying at the Bottom of the Enclosure: What It Can Mean

A jumping spider staying at the bottom may be resting, stressed, dehydrated, or ill. Learn when to monitor at home and...

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Jumping Spider Stress Signs: How to Recognize an Overstressed Jumper

Learn the stress signs in jumping spiders, what can trigger them, when to call your vet, and how to make your jumper’s...

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Jumping Spider Stuck in Molt: Emergency Signs and Safe Next Steps

Jumping spider stuck in molt? Learn emergency warning signs, safe home steps, when to see your vet, and realistic 2026...

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Jumping Spider Suddenly Aggressive: Defensive Behavior, Stress or Pain?

A jumping spider acting aggressive may be stressed, startled, premolt, injured, or unwell. Learn red flags, home care,...

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Jumping Spider Swollen Abdomen: Overfed, Gravid, Constipated or Ill?

A jumping spider’s swollen abdomen may be normal after feeding, egg-related, or a warning sign. Learn when to monitor...

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Jumping Spider Too Cold: Signs of Chilling, Sluggishness and Recovery

A chilled jumping spider may become slow, weak, or unresponsive. Learn warning signs, safe warming steps, when to see...

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Jumping Spider Tremors or Twitching: Stress, Molt Problem or Toxin Exposure?

Jumping spider twitching can signal stress, a bad molt, dehydration, overheating, or toxin exposure. Learn red flags,...

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Jumping Spider Uncoordinated or Off Balance: Neurologic Signs to Watch For

Jumping spider off balance or uncoordinated? Learn urgent neurologic signs, common causes, home care, and when to see...

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