Yes nursery web Spiders do make webs. They create a type of web called a nursery web. This web is also known as a garden spider web because of its garden-like pattern and resemblance to a garden. The web is made up of an outer rim of non-sticky threads and a dome of extremely sticky threads. Nursery web spiders use their webs to capture prey such as flies and mosquitoes as well as to protect their eggs.
Nursery web spiders build their webs in the following way:
Nursery web spiders webs are an important part of their lifestyle as they use them to capture prey protect their eggs and provide a safe space for them to live in.
If by "redback spiders" you mean the kind of widow spiders that grow in Australia, they make the same kind of three-dimensional tangled filament webs that all the member of their Family make. Some other kinds of spiders make orb webs, sheet webs, etc.
No. They do not prefer any compass direction. Some spiders make webs that face up. Many spiders make webs near to porch lights because these lights attract insects. Where the web goes, and which direction it faces (if it is not a messy tangle web like that of the black widow spiders) generally depends on where the spider can find appropriate supports from which to hang its web.
Many spiders weave webs but not all do. Some spiders are ambush predators and do not build webs and still others actually chase their prey rather than relying on a web.
Not necessarily. Both female and male spiders are capable of making various types of webs. The complexity and appearance of a spider's web are often species-specific rather than being determined by gender. However, some species do exhibit differences in web design based on their hunting strategies.
go to a new web
Spiders let there web flow with the wind in any derection then it will land in a leaf or a brunch of a tree. some species fly with there web.
Well spiders that make webs only make the webs so that they can catch food; I'm presuming by 'hunting spiders' you mean spiders that kill in limb to limb action and/or biting/venom - these spiders kill stuff themselves and so don't need a web to survive... Survival of the fittest and shiz! Yeah that's just my opinion, but technically all spiders are hunters since they eat other animals ;)
Interestingly enough, webs are made by both caterpillars and spiders. Tent caterpillars create web-like nests in trees that resemble tents. These silken nests protect them from predators, and also allow them to feed on the leaves of the tree. Spiders also make silken webs. These are typically closer to the shape most often associated with webs. Most spider use their webs to trap their prey and eat.
Spiders that spin webs do so as a means of catching food. Another reason for webs is that male spiders use them during the process of reproduction.
Yes, all spiders have glands which produce silk. Not all spiders build webs (orb, sheet, funnel or otherwise) but they all have the capability to make silk.
There are a number of different spiders called banana spiders. A common one in Texas and other warm climates is the golden silk orb-weaver. This spider make large webs.
Spiders of both sexes spin webs.