YES!
Most Spiders will live in the web they have spun to catch their prey. Others will burrow under ground, and wait to ambush, or atack their prey.
yes, spiders can live in dens that they make in the ground to catch small prey such as mice,.
by grabbing it
By enjecting venom through their teeth and into there prey
Yes, spiders possess venom, not poison. They use their venom to immobilize and digest their prey. Spiders inject venom into their prey through their fangs, which helps them catch and consume their food.
Spiders that don't use webs to catch their prey are known as hunting spiders. They actively stalk and hunt down their prey instead of relying on webs to trap them. Examples of hunting spiders include wolf spiders, jumping spiders, and crab spiders.
Spiders usually catch moths and small flies in their webs. But there are Jumping Spiders (in my house) and these guys catch and eat other spiders. So we don't have many spiders. There are also trap door spiders who live in the ground and have their tunnel concealed by a trap door, from which they leap out to catch prey.
They hunt their prey, unlike most other spiders that trap their prey in webs.
Bird spiders catch their prey like most other spiders by weaving a web made of sticky strands and waiting for prey to get caught in it. The bird spider, being the second largest spider in the world, also sometimes kills and eats tiny animals this way.
Most spiders hunt insects. Very large spiders sometimes catch tiny animals.
Spiders are an example of adaptation. They construct webs to catch prey.
spiders make webs to catch there prey and ticks are parasites the feed off there host.