No, it does not come from it's annis (do you mean anus?) The web comes from spinnerettes on it's abdomen.
Funnel-web spiders come from Australia and Tasmania. See the Related Link. ------------------ ???... Dude, use your head. They're called Sydney Funnel-Web spiders, obviously they come from Sydney, Australia & the islands around it (Tasmania being one of them).
Funnel-Web Spiders are named for their distinctive funnel-shaped webs that they construct to catch prey. These spiders are known for their aggressive behavior and potent venom, making them one of the most dangerous spiders in the world.
There are about 40 different species of funnel web spiders.
Technically speaking, yes, spiders spin webs from their bottom.
The Sydney Funnel-Web spider is a very aggressive hunter, not a lot of things can actually hunt a Funnel-Web.
Spiders make the strands of web with special organs called "spinnerets" that are near the tip of the abdomen of the spider.
26 spiders
Funnel-web spiders come from Australia and Tasmania. See the Related Link. ------------------ ???... Dude, use your head. They're called Sydney Funnel-Web spiders, obviously they come from Sydney, Australia & the islands around it (Tasmania being one of them).
Sydney web spiders are found in Sydney, Australia .
The spiders web is the metal framework which separates the number sections on a dartboard.
Funnel-Web Spiders are named for their distinctive funnel-shaped webs that they construct to catch prey. These spiders are known for their aggressive behavior and potent venom, making them one of the most dangerous spiders in the world.
Funnel Web spiders only live in the tropics. Birmingham is safe from them.
no
in a web
When something touches a spiders web the movement is felt everywhere I the web. How is this like a change in a food web.
All I know is that spiders have saks or something full of silk, and they let it out and it makes a web.
The name for a spiders trap is its web. The web helps spiders trap their food and enemies.