No. Spiders go to a quiet place, make a sort of cup out of their silk, lay the eggs in the cup, and wrap it the rest of the way up.
Spiders do not even want to be on your skin. I just tested that once again today when I was cleaning house and found a little "second cousin" of a black widow. It was coming down a thread of silk, so I held my hand underneath it. The instant it touched my hand it knew that something was wrong and went right back up its line of silk to get away from this noxious landing place.
No, spiders do not lay eggs in human skin. Spiders typically lay their eggs in a safe and secluded location, such as a web or a burrow, where they can protect and care for their offspring.
no
No, spiders cannot lay eggs under the skin of an animal. Spiders typically lay their eggs in a silk sac or cocoon that they attach to a surface. They do not have the ability to lay eggs directly under the skin of animals.
Fish typically lay the most eggs compared to frogs and spiders. Some fish species can lay thousands to millions of eggs at once, while frogs and spiders typically lay smaller clutches of eggs.
....No.
spiders and grasshoppers both do.
Spiders lay eggs anywhere it's safe for them, not just a human host.
Spiders lay eggs which then hatch into little spiders.
Yes, their egg sacs contain hundreds of eggs. Before they lay their eggs they will eat the male (go figure). Then, after they lay their eggs they will die.
Spiders do not lay eggs when they bite as a bite is usually to immobilize a victim for consumption. Spider eggs are usually placed in a carefully constructed nest made of spun silk.
They don't. They lay their eggs in sand. What you heard was a myth.
No they don't.