Web/small cove/ your mouth
wood
Spiders need shelter as well as humans do. That just happens to be in your house.
Spiders spin webs not only for shelter but to capture their food. Insects, bugs, and other spiders get caught in these webs.
Some spiders fold a leaf and seal it with silk, they use the leaves as a shelter.
they live in tree oles by the roots...unless spiders are already there
Arthropod means "jointed feet" and includes arachnids, crustaceans, insects, and others. What they would use for shelter varies too greatly to list here and would be based on the environment of the specific arthropod.
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 live all over the world, but few are native to more than a few habitats. They are well-adapted to various conditions, but thrive in warmer climates (in Antarctica, stowaway spiders are dependent on humans habitations for shelter). Essentially, spiders are found everywhere except for on the Antarctic mainland. Surprisingly, spiders the size of dinner plates have been found on the seabed far below the surface of Antarctic waters. Many spiders spin webs in tree branches, but some live in holes that they disguise with their webs. Larger spiders, such as the tarantula, are free-hunting but generally only prey on insects.
Spiders live all over the world, but few are native to more than a few habitats. They are well-adapted to various conditions, but thrive in warmer climates (in Antarctica, stowaway spiders are dependent on humans habitations for shelter). Many spiders spin webs in tree branches, but some live in holes that they disguise with their webs. Larger spiders, such as the tarantula, are free-hunting but generally only prey on insects.
Some spiders specialize in daytime hunting. Jumping spiders, for instance, have very good vision and they use it to detect prey from a distance. They could not hunt well at all during the night time. Some spicers specialize in night time hunting. There are spiders that build a web at dusk and then take it all down when the sun comes out in the morning. They hunt at night because they are much safer from things like birds. Some spiders may hunt whenever something tasty comes along. Wolf spiders may prefer to hunt at night, but if one were taking shelter under a rock and a tasty cricket would come along the spider would probably gobble it up. Some web weaving spiders have a sort of telegraph line between their spiral web and a hideout where they wait for something to blunder into the web. They probably hang out in their shelter, but come out whenever they get prey in their webs.
No. Fishing spiders are hunting spiders of the genus Dolomedes.
Jumpimg spiders, wolf spiders, fishing spiders, cobweb spiders, barn spiders, cellar spiders, funnel spider (grass spider), garden spider.