All spiders, except for one species (the Diving Bell spider), live on land.
Some do. Think crab, lobster, barnacle, horseshoe crab, water beetles and even diving bell spiders.
nobody knows for sure what this spider eats exactly, but we know that its a meal itself.
Diving spiders make a sort of "diving bell" underwater. They live in there, so they need to fill it with air so they will have something to breathe. The spines on their body can trap air, so they rise to the top of the water, do a sort of somersault to throw themselves above the water surface and right back down into the water. When they come back under, they are covered in a bubble of air. They swim down to the diving bell where they shuck off the bubble of air. If there still is not enough air in their diving bell, then they may go back up again for another bubble.
Diving bell spider was created in 1758.
Adult female water spiders (diving bell spiders) are from 10 to 15 mm in length, but the males are generally larger, 12 to 19 mm in length. It is unusual for male spiders to be larger than the females of a species.
In 1616, the German inventor Kessler introduced his diving bell with glass ports
Eads
Lobsters, crabs, and horseshoe crabs are examples of arthropods that live in the ocean. Crayfish (aka crawdads), diving beetles, diving spiders, and pond skimmers are examples of arthropods that live in fresh water.
It is a device that looks like a bell and helps you dive into very deep places. the bell hosts the people in it sheilding them from the pressure.
you go to big catch and talk to the claws he will teach and give you a gem diving bell.
Yes - the most well-known are diving bell spiders, which live in fresh water and construct a bubble of air held in silk. They constantly supply it and can live in it for a little while, but they spend more time swimming and hunting. There are also aquatic mites, and animals that are not arachnids but do belong to the greater group of chelicerates which include spindly sea spiders (which are generally so small that their muscles consist of a single cell) and even horseshoe crabs!