If you're referring to the large Spiders that supposedly crawl up into camels and lay their eggs, then no. If they do exist, they would be limited to the areas where camels live and manycountries have very cold areas where camels don't live, so they won't ever 'conquer the world'.
In the commercial of the camel for Geico.
we give proper cear to a camel by feeding them every day
Pakistani and Afghani camels are can produce up to 30 liters of milk per day. The Bactrian camel produces five liters per day. The dromedary camel produces close to 20 liters per day.
There are many different kinds of spiders in the world. These spiders all eat at different frequencies based on their species.
Nobody can answer that with absoloute certainty since nobody has tested the top running speed of every known species of spider under similar conditions. However, one of the fastest spiders that have been clocked is the Giant House spider (Eratigena sp., (formerly Tegenaria duellica/ T. gigantia). It managed 1.73 feet per second over a level surface, though it can only manage this speed in short bursts before it has to stop to regain energy. Tales of camel spiders achieving speeds of 35-40mph are wrong on two counts; Firstly, camel spiders are not actually spiders but a seperate order of (ten-legged) arachnid known as Solifugae, which are more closely related to scorpions (wind scorpion is their other common name). Secondly, wind scorpions/camel spiders can only manage a top speed of around 10mph across flat terrain. While still very fast, it's way short of the 35-40mph stated on some internet sites. Unfortunately there are numerous urban myths about camel spiders that were based on anecdotal tales told by GI's returning from Iraq and Afghanistan which were clearly intended to scare new recruits, but which quickly spread via the internet, leading to many common misconceptions about them persisting to this day.
International camel day
390-450 day
Day or night, whatever the owner wants.
camel
Browses vegetation and interacts with the herd.
i dont think they did know, but it took a long time
As of now they estimate 38,000 + spiders have been recorded. Statistics show that this is about 5% of all spiders living in the world. Many new discoveries are happening every day, and new spiders are being found all over the world.