Sort of. The Sydney Tunneling Spider spins a web inside the ground, and after it digs its hole, it spins a lid for the hole, and camoflages it. When prey comes around, it would step on the web, sendng vibrations which the spider feels, and quickly goes to the surface to paralyze its prey and suck the juices out of the prey!!! LOL, i like studying Spiders.
There are the sydney funnel web spiders in australia that trapdoor spiders in Australia are generally mixed up with there is the wishbone trapdoor spider, the central victorian funnel web spider.
No, they do not spin webs. They do use silk to line their burrows and create trip lines sticking out from the burrows, so that they can feel prey moving nearby.
Ask a spider
Camel spider A dead one
Spiders of both sexes spin webs.
spin a orb
Trapdoor spider.
it stores the web in it's spinnerets
"its" is a possessive pronoun. "spin" should be "spins".
The scientific name for the Trapdoor spider is "Mygalomorphae."
Usually a spider wasp crawls to the trapdoor spider's hole and if manages to get inside, lays her eggs into the spider. The larvae hatch and slowly eat the trapdoor spider from inside out.
The lynx spider does spin webs but only for one reason, to hold the eggs. otherwise this spider does not use a large web for catching its prey.