Yes some of them do make a silken ground-cover for the spot that they like to stand on while waiting for prey. They stand at the center of the (usually raised) spot where they like to stand and turn around and around while expelling silk in a broad band from their spinnerets. Then they keep extending the edges until they have enough covered to satisfy themselves.
Tarantulas that live in burrows will cover the walls of the burrow with webbing to improve their footing and to help prevent cave-ins. The method is the same.
Tarantulas that live in trees and bushes will make vertical silken "socks" to live in. The method is the same, but they start at the top and apply silk in a vertically hanging circle around themselves until they get the "sock" long enough to satisfy themselves.
first,a young spider make a net like a umbrella.then wait for a wind to convey that spider far.then middle-aged Spiders Strengthen the net that young spider spin.
then middle-aged spiders develop that net and...
spiders have spinnerets on the underside of their abdomen, the spider makes three different forms of silk that come from its spinnerets a type of less sticky silk, like a practice web to sustain the night then when its confident in the web structure its actually eats up its own web, regurgitating it for extra web overnight for making its next web. the next web is much more sticky with wet globules on each strand of its web web is smaller but neater and more impressive.each time its web is damaged ever so slightly, overnight it without delay repairs its web doing it all over again.Spiders such as the golden orb weaver spider have some of the strongest webs known to man and have been known to trap birds in them.Web from spiders is the strongest biopolomer and is known to bestronger than steel,thats in same measurement,in other words if a spiders web was as thick as a peace of steel the spiders thick web would be stronger.
I hope I did'nt give you too much information on spiders, I just find them fascinating thats all,I hope this info helped,CHEERS.
Spiders make webs in any space where they can fit their webs
no, they both make the same
Spiders keep their webs as long as they are alive.
When ever they want to . But some do not make webs
Spiders make unique webs because they do not want other spiders coming into their webs. They have a unique shape, design, and scent to keep other away.
NO
yes.
orb spiders
trapdoor spiders
spiders make webs
yes they do
no, but SPIDERS spin WEBS.
If by "redback spiders" you mean the kind of widow spiders that grow in Australia, they make the same kind of three-dimensional tangled filament webs that all the member of their Family make. Some other kinds of spiders make orb webs, sheet webs, etc.