Publications by Michael H. Robinson and colleagues in the 1970s and 1980s referred to specimens they found in Wau, Papua New Guinea as belonging to an undescribed taxon. They had enlisted the Capuchin friar Chrysanthus to identify spider specimens and he realized this constituted a new species; he died in 1972 before able to further study it, but thought it belonged to the genus Argiope.[6] Robinson and colleagues referred to it as "Species 'F'" or "Argiope sp. F".[1][7] Robinson and colleagues later thought it might be in the genus Gea after noticing the similarity to Gea heptagon; after Levi confirmed its generic placement, they subsequently called it "Gea sp. Wau No. 1".[8][9]
The type locality is McAdam Park, near Wau, Morobe Province, Papua New Guinea.[12]G. eff spiders were recorded in the Wau Valley as part of a year-long transect study by Robinson and colleagues.[13] Additional specimens have been collected elsewhere in Morobe Province, as well as in Madang Province and Central Province. In addition to these locations on the island of New Guinea, G. eff has been found on Tagula Island in the Louisiade Archipelago and on the island of New Britain.[12] It is found in tall grass.[14] Specimens have been collected in coconut plantations as well as in forest.[5]
G. eff is a "very small" species.[15] The female is 2.2 times bigger than the male.[16] It is one of the least sexually dimorphic species of the subfamily Argiopinae.[17] The female has a total length of 6.6 mm; it has a brown carapace, a light-colored head, a black sternum with a white longitudinal stripe, and banded legs.[5] The male has a total length of 3.0 mm; its carapace, sternum, and legs are beige, and its dorsum has two white spots.[5]
Gea eff builds its webs in the herbaceous layer.[18] It creates a stabilimentum, or web decoration,[19] consisting of an X-shaped pattern, with zig-zag bands forming a cross,[14] which does not block the hub of the web.[20] Their webs are "relatively durable".[18]
Robinson and Robinson placed G. eff in "Group C", meaning it had "advanced" courtship and mating behaviors.[8]G. eff engages in courtship on a mating thread outside the orb-web.[17] It is a sexual cannibal and has an average copulation duration of 0.9 minutes.[21] Sexual cannibalism occurs before copulation. The rate has not been determined as it has only been observed anecdotally.[22]
^World Spider Catalog (2022). "Gea eff Levi, 1983". World Spider Catalog. 23.0. Bern: Natural History Museum Bern. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
^Kulczyński, W. (1910). "Araneae et Arachnoidea Arthrogastra". Denkschriften der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften: Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Classe. 85: 392–394, Pl. 17, Figs. 3–4.
^Kulczyński, W. (1911). "Spinnen aus Nord-Neu-Guinea". Nova Guinea: Résultats de l'expédition scientifique néerlandaise à la Nouvelle-Guinée en 1903. 5. Zoologie (4): 476, 518, Pl. 20, Figs. 48–49.
^ abHerberstein, M. E.; Craig, C. L.; Coddington, J. A.; Elgar, M. A. (2007). "The functional significance of silk decorations of orb-web spiders: a critical review of the empirical evidence". Biological Reviews. 75 (4): 655. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.2000.tb00056.x. hdl:10088/4445.
^Elgar, Mark A. (1995). "The duration of copulation in spiders: comparative patterns". In Harvey, Mark S. (ed.). Australasian Spiders and Their Relatives: Papers Honouring Barbara York Main. Records of the Western Australian Museum, Supplement. Vol. 52. Perth: Western Australian Museum. p. 10.
^Elgar, M.A. (1992). "Sexual cannibalism in spiders and other invertebrates". In Elgar, M.A.; Crespi, B.J. (eds.). Cannibalism: Ecology and Evolution Among Diverse Taxa. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 132.
Robinson, Barbara C.; Robinson, Michael H. (1974). "The biology of some Argiope species from New Guinea: predatory behaviour and stabilimentum construction (Araneae: Araneidae)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 54 (2): 145–159. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.1974.tb00796.x.