Probably just depends. If you suck one up and then keep vacuuming, they will get buried under new dirt/debris and won't be able to get out. But if you just turn on the vacuum for a second to suck one up and then turn it off, it's probably still alive and coud theoretically find its way out.. eventually.
The effects of the vacuum places them in a dimensional rift above your bed where they randomly drop out and into your mouth while you sleep.
probably depends on the vacuum. If it has one of those spinning brush dealies then the spider is probably pretty much fvcked.
I usually vacuum them up, then empty the cannister, seek out the spider, make sure it's in fact dead, then step on it in the trash can just to be sure. A little bit of bug spray or bleach helps too. Spray the sucker first, watch it writhe, laugh at it, then suck it away into oblivion. Then step on it.
They would almost definitely die. Did any of you guys take high school Biology? Spiders are incredibly fragile. Even falling off of a table onto the ground can often kill them. Being violently sucked into a vacum cleaner should definitely kill them.
i actually did this once. sucked up a quarter sized spider with the hose attachment (not the brush part). so the spider got sucked up intact. I have a bagless and the canister is clear, so I could see the spider in there trying to get out. I turned the vacuum on and watched the spider go round and round in the whirlwind. But even after a while, the spider didnt die, it was moving around. I figured if the spider can take that kind of a beating AND still climb out somehow, it deserves to live. So i just left it in the canister and eventually forgot about it. A week or so later, I remembered about it out of the blue and when I checked up on it, it was still there, but it was lifeless and curled up.
I guess the injuries it suffered during the whirlwind caused it to die eventually.
Vacuum - 1
Spider - 0
Not necessarily. There are variables, but a trip through a vacuum into a dust bin or dust bag won't necessarily kill spider eggs.
If the vaccum sits without use for a long enoug period of time a spider could lay eggs in it. If used regularly, then no.
yes
Yes, their egg sacs contain hundreds of eggs. Before they lay their eggs they will eat the male (go figure). Then, after they lay their eggs they will die.
....No.
spiders and grasshoppers both do.
Spiders lay eggs anywhere it's safe for them, not just a human host.
Spiders lay eggs which then hatch into little spiders.
Well, all female spiders do.
it depends how they do it
No they don't.
no
Unknown
They don't. They lay their eggs in sand. What you heard was a myth.
Spiders. they can lay up to 550 eggs.