Spiders make an egg case, lay their eggs in it, and seal it up. Then they either carry the egg case along with them (as do the wolf spiderss, the fishing spiders, etc.), build a nursery web in preparation for holding in the baby spiders for a few days while they grow up a little and then hang the egg sac in there so they can hang out on the outside and protect everything (those spiders are called nursery web spiders), or they fasten the egg sac wherever they take shelter on a regular basis.
Spiders spin webs with their silk and also use it to wrap up their prey.
They used Silk from Spiders or cloth from the tree
Uloboridae is a family of spiders that do not have venom but wrap their prey with silk and then use digestive enzymes to eat them.
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.
to trap food such as flies or bees
Yes, there are some types of spiders that do not possess venom, such as the Uloboridae family of spiders. These spiders use silk to capture their prey instead of venom.
Spiders are able to unmake their webs by digesting the silk using a specialized enzyme that breaks down the proteins in the silk. This allows the spider to recycle the silk proteins and re-use them to build a new web.
Some spiders fold a leaf and seal it with silk, they use the leaves as a shelter.
Yes, spiders can produce multiple types of silk from different glands in their spinnerets. These types of silk can vary in strength, elasticity, and stickiness, allowing spiders to use them for different purposes such as building webs, wrapping prey, or creating egg sacs.
Spider webs are found everywhere because spiders use them to catch prey and protect themselves. The silk they produce is strong and sticky, making it an effective tool for survival.
they use there male units.
use their poison