It doesnt matter they just prefer to live in the dark but theyll lay eggs whatever the weather. Or time as it were.
On a web
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.
Spiders are very proficient at reproducing. Some lay as few as ten eggs, while others can lay up 1,500 eggs.
Yes insects lay eggs in many different ways and places and spiders (arachnids) lay eggs in spun cases called egg sacks. I completely changed it ;/
Yes spiders can lay there eggs in the bottom of bananas. There was a banana bought from a local supermarket in my town and a tarantula came out of it and an amoeba(egg sack)
Yes, all spiders lay eggs. They typically produce silk egg sacs to protect their eggs until they hatch. Each sac can contain hundreds of eggs, depending on the species of spider.
It is safer as the egg will be left undisturbed.
Spiders make an egg case, lay their eggs in it, and seal it up. Then they either carry the egg case along with them (as do the wolf spiderss, the fishing spiders, etc.), build a nursery web in preparation for holding in the baby spiders for a few days while they grow up a little and then hang the egg sac in there so they can hang out on the outside and protect everything (those spiders are called nursery web spiders), or they fasten the egg sac wherever they take shelter on a regular basis.
Spiders do not give birth. They lay eggs. Typically they lay their eggs in a silken sac of some kind that is sealed until the spiders start to hatch. The silken sac is carried around by some spiders such as the wolf spiders, or may be hung in or near to the spider's web. Different spiders have different places to keep their egg sacs safe.
the egg comes from the came orifice they use for their pooper.
Over ninethousand spiders can respawn from a spider corpse. Spiders lay eggs contained in sacks made of web silk. Several hundred spiders can hatch from one egg sack. A dead spider, a spider corpse, will not "respawn" any hatchlings. Many spiders are fiercely protective of their egg sack clutching it in their mouth or legs.
"Different spiders mate in different positions, but in all cases the aim is to transfer sperm from the male to the female. The male does this by inserting the mating organ at the end of its pedipalp (a spine-like structure on tip) carrying the sperm, into the female's reproductive (epigynal) opening on the underside of her body. In some species the tip of the pedipalp will break off during mating or a hardened secretion will block the females openings, preventing other males from mating with that female. The sperm is stored in sacs inside the female's abdomen until she is ready to lay her eggs." Source: http://www.amonline.net.au/spiders/life/mating/mating.htm