POST A PICTURE OR ESLE NO ONE WILL KNOW BECAUSE...There are 350,000 species of spiders. Here are a few: garden spider, tarantula, black widow, jumping spider, web casting spider, trap door spider, sheet web spider, water spider, bolas spider, hunts man spider, brown recluse spider, crab spider, wolf spider, marbled orb spider, and ogre faced spider. Spiders are not insects.
· They are arachnids.
· They have eight legs, with tiny claws at the end.
· Female spiders are bigger than male spiders.
· Tarantulas can eat red eyed tree frogs.
· Black widow spiders eat their mate after mating.
· Jumping spiders don’t spin webs- they jump on their prey.
· Jumping spiders have great eyesight.
· House spiders might even live in your house.
· Spider wasps hatch eggs in spider bodies.
· Spiders are related to scorpions.
· Spiders have exoskeletons.
· Spiders make egg sacs in which spiderlings hatch.
· Spiders who spin webs have a special body part that makes silk.
Most people think that all spiders spin webs, but that isn’t true! Water spiders live in water until an insect (or other food) comes along, then it drowns its prey and eats it! Another spider that doesn’t spin a web is a jumping spider. Jumping spiders creep up and pounce on their prey. Tarantulas dig burrows as nests. Wolf spiders swiftly search for food and are excellent hunters.
Web-Spinning Spiders
Web-spinning spiders, like hunting spiders, live in caves, grass, shrubs, or in trees. They can’t catch food by hunting because of their poor eyesight, so they spin webs to catch insects.
Most spiders build a new part of their web every day. When a struggling bug gets caught in the web, the spider will put poison in the insect and kills them. Net casting spiders hang head down and hold its silk while hanging down on its front legs and eating the insect.
Did you know there are different types of webs? Here are a few:
2006-09-27 09:33:09
·
answer #1
·
answered by STROMBOLI-KRAKATOA JR 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
As long as it stays outside, you should be alright. If you're worried it might come inside - just kill it.
2006-09-27 09:30:51
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Dont kill it, most likely not poisonous.
2006-09-27 09:29:09
·
answer #3
·
answered by T F 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
If it's still there, then it may be the dead type.
2006-09-27 09:29:37
·
answer #4
·
answered by Gentle Dragon 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
an icky one just kill it please i dont even like thinking of those creepy crawlys
2006-09-27 09:35:24
·
answer #5
·
answered by Loved 4
·
0⤊
0⤋