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Furrow spiders belong to the genus Larinioides.These spiders weave orb webs. No spiders that weave orb webs are dangerous to humans.
Spiders weave webs (known as "spider's webs" or "cobwebs") for a variety of purposes, foremost for residence, food, and in some cases decoration.
Yes, their webs are funnel shaped, thus the name.
To better explain phenomenons such as lightning or why spiders weave webs.
Many spiders weave webs but not all do. Some spiders are ambush predators and do not build webs and still others actually chase their prey rather than relying on a web.
they can weave webs and hold their pray better, but some spiders have a hard time moving around on their webs, and some are too heavy
Here is a poem:SpidersSpiders are curious insects to see,Their webs are really neat.But how do they weave them elaborately,When all they have is feet?
no, but SPIDERS spin WEBS.
No, tent worms, webworms, and silk worms also spin webs and cocoons.
spider webs are made of sticky things that come out of a spiders butt
Spiders make unique webs because they do not want other spiders coming into their webs. They have a unique shape, design, and scent to keep other away.
not all spiders have the ability to build homes in their webs