no
Spiders lay eggs anywhere it's safe for them, not just a human host.
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.
The human botfly will lay eggs in a human's skin.
well the simple answer is if you are holding some and they lay eggs yes there gonna lay eggs on your hands .
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.
Spiders, spider's eggs and the like CANNOT survive in the human body. This is one of those urban legends that plays on our fear of spiders. Spiders do not lay their eggs inside of animals (human or other), and the animals (parasites) that CAN survive in the human body, are especially designed to resist the harsh conditions, viz. stomach acid. The larvae of most parasites are encysted to protect against acids and other unfavorable conditions. In fact some wasps lay eggs onto and sometimes into the spider's abdomen. When the larvae hatches, it will eat the spider. Spiders; however, prefer to lay their eggs in the web. Next time you hear a story of someone who had spiders crawling out of the body, take it, with a grain of salt.
Horse flies do not lay eggs on humans, they lay eggs on leaves, grass and other vegetation. Flies that lay eggs under human skin are bot flies.
....No.
spiders and grasshoppers both do.
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.