The deadliest spider in Australia is the Red Back spider, closely followed by the Funnel web spider.
Funnel Web spiders only live in the tropics. Birmingham is safe from them.
They live in the desert.
There are a number of places where you could find pictures of a map where funnel web spiders can be found in Australia. You could check the books at the local library for example.
Yes they do. I have a funnel web in my back yard at the base of our wooden fence but I have yet to see the spider. I live in central Ontario and I don't know how common it is to find funnel webs here but I've lived here my whole life, in rural and urban areas, and I've never seen one before yesterday.
Funnel web spiders are not native to Mississippi. They are primarily found in Australia, particularly along the eastern coast. Mississippi is home to a variety of spider species, but funnel web spiders are not among them.
Spiders that live in dirt, such as wolf spiders or funnel-web spiders, typically have a camouflaged appearance to blend in with their environment. They may be brown, gray, or black in color with a hairy body and legs. These spiders are adapted for the underground habitat, with specialized behaviors and physical traits for burrowing and hunting.
The Funnel Web Grass Spider. They live in the grass mostly and are poisonous but are not aggressive spiders.
There are varieties of funnel-web spiders all around the world. The araneomorph funnel-web spider (the modern funnel-web spider) has been located almost *everywhere*, except the far north and Antarctica. The venomous funnel-web tarantula has been found in chiefly southern parts of 5 continents -- all except North America and Antarctica. Of these, the Australian funnel-web spider is confined to Australia. Another tarantula, the sheet funnel-web spider, is generally found in the West US and Latin America.
This spider lives in Sydney, Australia, and within a 60 mile radius of the city. This spider is venomous and its bites are considered deadly if left untreated.
Yes, spiders eat bees.Specifically, spiders are arachnids. They include among their prey insects such as bees. Bing-ing or yahoo-ing "bee-eating spiders" will bring forth images of crab, funnel and green lynx spiders devouring dead and live bees.
Yes. Spiders live nearly everywhere that humans live.