Everyone can see the coordinates unless the taxon is threatened.
Obscured
Public coordinates shown as a random point within 10KM of the true coordinates. True coordinates are only visible to you and the curators of projects to which you add the observation.
private
Coordinates completely hidden from public maps, true coordinates only visible to you and the curators of projects to which you add the observation. Observations with private coordinates will still be used to verify place check lists.
That's actually pretty big for a spider. I'm guessing this is something in http://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/Philodromidae (retrograde legs, second pair longer than first pair), but I guess Thomisidae is also a possibility.
Cool. I figured I would only be able to get an ID for it if it was something incredibly common that there weren't many kinds of. It was on the outside of the tent so you can't really see much detail through the mesh unfortunately.
Comments & Identifications
That's actually pretty big for a spider. I'm guessing this is something in http://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/Philodromidae (retrograde legs, second pair longer than first pair), but I guess Thomisidae is also a possibility.
Cool. I figured I would only be able to get an ID for it if it was something incredibly common that there weren't many kinds of. It was on the outside of the tent so you can't really see much detail through the mesh unfortunately.
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