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there is around ten thousand to one hundred thousand spiders in the egg sac depending on the size of the spider
A spider begins its life in an egg sac. Once they hatch from the egg, spiders are called spiderlings. Spiderlings then molt to become adults.
around 3000 i believe...
After mating with a male, the female spider produces an egg sac that can contain up to a thousand tiny spider eggs. The egg sac is made of silk, and the color varies from species to species. In some species, the female spider carries the egg sac on her spinnerets or in her jaws until the eggs hatch. In other species, the egg sac is hidden under a rock, attached to a plant stalk, or encased in a web. Tiny spiderlings (baby spiders) hatch from the eggs - they look like tiny versions of an adult spider. Some spiderlings are on their own and receive no care from their mother. Other spiders climb onto their mother's back after hatching, where she feeds them. In some species, the mother dies when the young are ready to go off on their own, and the spiderlings eat her carcass.
The male purse spider will seek out a female spider. After mating they will live in her tunnel until his death. She will consume him and make an egg sac that is hung in the burrow. The eggs do not hatch until the next summer, and the baby spiders will not leave their mother's burrow until the following spring.
4-6 weeks after laying, the female spider will moisten and tear open the egg sac for the spiderlings to emerge.
Wilbur carried Charlotte's egg sac in his mouth to the farm after Charlotte died. He was determined to protect her eggs and ensure that her legacy lived on.
spider
4-6 weeks after laying, the female spider will moisten and tear open the egg sac for the spiderlings to emerge.
So, what is your question????
No. They lay eggs and carry them around in a silken egg sac. When the eggs hatch they let the babies ride on their backs until they are ready to make it on their own. Then the mother spider goes on her own way. She probably will die of old age and the cold when winter comes.
A male spider deposits his sperm into a sperm web, holding it in his palps. Then he cautiously approaches a female spider. The male spider deposits the sperm into an opening on the underside of the female spider's abdomen. The female fertilizes her eggs with the stored sperm and then lays them into an egg sac.