In aggressive mimicry, a predator accesses prey by mimicking the appearance and/or behavior of a harmless or beneficial model in order to avoid being correctly identified by its prey. The crab spider genus Phrynarachne is often cited as a textbook example of masquerading as bird droppings in order to avoid predation. However, Phrynarachne spiders may also aggressively mimic bird droppings in order to deceive potential prey. To date, there is no experimental evidence to support aggressive mimicry in masquerading crab spiders, therefore, we performed a field survey, a manipulative field experiment, and visual modeling to test this hypothesis using Phrynarachne ceylonica. We compared prey-attraction rates among bird droppings, spiders, and control empty leaves in the field. We found that although all prey combined and agromyzid dipterans in particular were attracted to bird droppings at a higher rate than to spiders, other dipterans and hymenopterans were attracted to bird droppings at a similar rate as spiders. Both spiders and bird droppings attracted insects at a significantly higher rate than did control leaves. As predicted, prey were attracted to experimentally blackened or whitened spiders significantly less frequently than to unmanipulated spiders. Finally, visual modeling suggested that spiders and bird droppings can be detected by dipterans and hymenopterans against background leaves, but they are indistinguishable from each other. Taken together, our results suggest that insects lured by spiders may misidentify them as bird droppings, and bird dropping masquerading may serve as aggressive mimicry in addition to predator avoidance in P. ceylonica.