Yes.
According to Dr. G.B. Edwards, an arachnologist with the Florida State Collection of Arthropods in Gainesville, the brown widow venom is twice as potent as black widow venom. However, they do not inject as much venom as a black widow, are very timid, and do not defend their web.
Nope, not a chance. Those two species come from completely different families and they would attack and eat each other. I don't think it is even physically possible for them to mate. Mating pairs of individual species have genitalia that is pretty much a lock and key system. One perfectly fits the other. Other species' equipment simply would not work.... and like I said, these two species would instantly attack and eat each other before they even knew what hit them.
The spider that resembles a black widow with a red spot on its back is likely a false black widow spider. These spiders are often mistaken for black widows due to their similar appearance, but their bite is generally less severe.
No they do not. They are not able to produce silk.
Spider is light brown with gold or yellow diamond back
Carefully
The Brown Recluse and the Black Widow are both poisonous and native to New Mexico.
No. After killing her mate, the female black widow must live on afterwards to lay the eggs.
she doesnt
Lunch
yes
black widow
they eat there mate
black widow,brown widow, and brown recluse
A black widow spider (along with most other spiders) will kill her mate, so a woman who kills her husbands is called a black widow.
* A black widow is a spider * metaphorically speaking A blackwidow is a woman who kills her mate afterward. * A widow is a woman whose husband has died.
arachnids