Spiders don't feed their babies with milk. Baby spiders get their feed by themselves catching small insects and don't need mother's care.
adult giraffe take leaf from the trees then feed it to their young giraffe
They feed them milk
Spiders feed on ants and insects.
Yes, there is a wasp from Africa that catches spiders and paralyses them, then places them in its nest for its young grubs to feed off.
Give it after every 4 hours shave
Yes, kookaburras do regurgitate food to feed their young. Adult kookaburras catch and consume prey, then bring it back to the nest where they regurgitate it for their chicks. This behavior helps ensure that the young receive the necessary nutrients for growth and development.
A young mosquito is called a larva. Larvae live in water, where they feed and grow before developing into adult mosquitoes.
Spiders are produced from eggs laid by adult female spiders. Each egg sac can contain hundreds of eggs, which hatch into spiderlings that eventually grow into adult spiders. The process of spider reproduction involves mating between a male and female spider, with the female typically being responsible for egg-laying and caring for the young until they are independent.
In most species, female spiders will spin a thick, protective cocoon for their developing eggs and sometimes the spiderlings once they've hatched. Some species will leave the cocoon unattended while the young spiders develop, and others, such as wolf spiders, will carry the cocoons around with them.
If the cubs are young enough that they remain at their den, the adults eat the kill and feed the cubs by regurgitating what they've consumed.
Adult Wolf Spiders are about as big as your middle finger and your thumb curved to make a ring. I have wolf spiders in my home and i have a phobia of spiders, especially the big spiders. they are as tall as about an inch, or maybe half an inch. The "not fully grown" spiders are much faster than adult wolf spiders. These kinds of spiders are harmless, as well as 97.8% of all spiders in America.