Spiders frequently leave their webs. Male spiders leave their webs to crawl about in search of female spiders of the same species. Some orb-weaving spiders tear down their old web after it gets light in the morning, and then make a new one at night. Other spiders get their webs torn down for them (by, e.g., some clumsy human walking right through it) and have to start all over again. And on top of that, any web-weaving spider I've ever seen will drop on a silken bungee cord to escape whenever anything very much bigger than they are violently shakes their web.
Some spiders spend most of their time in a protected place that is connected to their web with a sort of telegraph line, or "string telephone line" would be more like it. When an insect gets caught that shakes the web and the web shakes the signal line. At that point the spider will climb back up that line to the web and deal with the struggling insect. Then, when it's all wrapped up, she will carry it back to her place of safety.
Spiders never run out of silk. So they can make webs forever but I doubt it.
Yes.
They spin there web in a cylinder like way
There are about 40 different species of funnel web spiders.
No.
yes
red back spiders eat flies that come from their web
26 spiders
They spin there web in a cylinder like way
There are about 40 different species of funnel web spiders.
The spiders web is the metal framework which separates the number sections on a dartboard.
Sydney web spiders are found in Sydney, Australia .
Funnel Web spiders only live in the tropics. Birmingham is safe from them.
in a web
no
When something touches a spiders web the movement is felt everywhere I the web. How is this like a change in a food web.
All I know is that spiders have saks or something full of silk, and they let it out and it makes a web.
The name for a spiders trap is its web. The web helps spiders trap their food and enemies.
On the Web