Sorry, there are no such thing as a Rhodesian Tiger eating spider.
Yes, anything then can catch in their web really, moths, butterflies, wasps, flies... the female spider may even eat the male spider...
All spiders are predators who eat other insects.
Huzzah! This is a fine question, my boy, a fine question indeed! Long have I researched the eating habits of the Tigris family, and I must say that I have been quite curious about this myself! It would seem quite confounded to suggest that a tiger would eat a spider, considering the rainforest spider's tendency to be fatally poisonous. However! Through my years of research, I have discovered quite irrevocably that the tiger has an incredibly resilient stomach lining. Also due to their high weight, they are less susceptible to the effects of spider poisoning. A tiger would have to eat 5-6 highly poisonous spiders in rapid succession to be fatally affected. For the most part, the tiger will tend to consume larger, meatier sources of food such as warthogs, baby rhinos, or spider MONKEYS, but in some cases when desperation sets in, a tiger will resort to a poisonous spider for sustenance.
It exists. The tarantula can eat small birds. and there's a spider that looks like a small tarantula but it only eat birds.
A bird-eating-spider eats birds
they eat when hungry or looking for food
yes they do. tiger came to across their mutual eating habit when the durians season. its occur that the smell of durians attract them to eat durian.
The Goliath Bird-Eating Tarantula (that doesn't actually eat birds) is the biggest spider in the world. It can grow to about the size of a dinner plate.
There are various amounts of birds that eat spiders. They just love them.
I believe if you eat it, no it isn't. But I still wouldn't recommend eating it.
Tiger sharks have a reputation for eating anything they encounter, and they eat all these things by swallowing them down.
spider moneys will usually eat dead animal carcasses, but sometimes have been known to kill live, large animals and eat them, such as a tiger.