A small Thomisid officially recorded for NSW and Victoria but certainly more widespread. Specimens have been collected in Brisbane and on North Stradbroke Island. It is an ambush hunter, usually in flowers. This spider is wrongly identified on page 105 of Mascord's 1980 book Spiders of Australia, as Xysticus bilimbatus. He notes that in New South Wales it is mostly found on the flowers of Pultenaea spp. The egg sac is a small chamber made by fastening together the flowers with silk. When the eggs are laid the spider stays with them in the chamber, probably hunting from the entrance, grabbing small insects attracted to the flowers. The name cruentata means blood spattered. The genus was changed to Australomisidia Pawel Szymkowiak in 2014 the name being a combination of two words: Australia and Thomisidae. Pawel's monograph featured a photo of this species by Robert Whyte on the cover. ♀ 5mm ♂ 4mm
From above
Facing
From above
Another specimen, Jevons Street park
Body length about 4mm, collected 23 December 2009 at Jevons Street Park, Walton Bridge Reserve, The Gap.
Another specimen, Jevons Street park
Posing on the leaf of a Tahitian Lime. It was on a Grevillea when it was collected.