yes,certain types do especially tarantulas and other ground dwelling arachnids
Yes, but they may only do so to nest and lay eggs. They are hunting spiders, meaning they do not rely on spider webs to catch their prey. Instead, they search and destroy insects.
Spiders spin webs to catch prey, protect themselves, and lay eggs. The silk they produce is strong and sticky, helping them trap insects for food and create a safe shelter.
Spiders spin webs to catch prey. The silk they produce is strong and sticky, helping them immobilize insects that get caught. The web also serves as a shelter and a place for spiders to lay their eggs.
The victim lay with her entrails smeared across the floor.
Yes they can very easily. Check corners either on the floor or on the ceiling where they could make sturdy webs and you could possibly find an egg sack (it looks like a very small cotton ball about the size of a peanut). Any bug spray will work to kill the eggs but might I suggest, you could relocate the egg sack and the spider outside in a flowerpot or somewhere safe so that the creatures can go on living. Thank you if you choose the latter suggestion, I couldn't bear the thought of killing such harmless creatures.
it is either a female wolf spider eating the males to lay eggs or bigger spider
Spiders lay eggs which then hatch into little spiders.
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.
Spiders are extremely important because Spiders fill a niche to eat disease carrying and crop destroying insects among others. They also are important for certain types of wasps, because without the spiders to lay eggs on, those wasps cannot reproduce.Large spiders like tarantulas, eat small rodents, snakes and lizards.
spiders and grasshoppers both do.
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.