yes that is where they populate the most
Brown recluse spiders are found in the US, in an area roughly centered around Arkansas. They can be found as far north as Iowa, east into Tennessee, south to the Gulf of Mexico, and west into Texas.
No, Brown Recluse Spiders do not live in Pennsylvania.
A brown recluse can live about six months without food or water. I'm not really sure how long they would live with they things they need, but they live longer in colder enviorments.
No whoever said that is unintelligent
Worst, two of most recluse spiders are found in Peru, the Chilean and the Gaucho.
The brown recluse does not have a backbone.
The Brown Recluse reproduces sexually.
The Brown Recluse and the Black Widow are both poisonous and native to New Mexico.
The glue boards are a great brown recluse repellent.
According to the Wikipedia and other articles here is their range:The brown recluse spider is native to the United States from the southern Midwest south to the Gulf of Mexico .[2] The native range lies roughly south of a line from southeastern Nebraska through southern Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana to southwestern Ohio. In the southern states, it is native from central Texas to western Georgia. They are generally not found west of the Rocky Mountains.[3] A related species, the brown violin spider (Loxosceles rufescens), is found in Hawaii.[4] Despite many rumors to the contrary, the brown recluse spider has not established itself in California,[5] nor Canada[6]. There are other species of Loxosceles native to the southwestern part of the United States, including California, that may resemble the brown recluse, but these species have never been documented as medically significant.
Brown recluse spiders are found all over the Southern United States. They prefer to create webs in dark places, such as under rocks or piles of wood and eat insects, such as grasshoppers.
The brown recluse (No, the brown recluse is brown, not black. It also has black pattern on its back resembling a violin. Thus, the brown recluse's nickname of fiddle-back.)