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The Spider Myths Site
• • • = You Are Here: Burke Museum : Spider Myths : General : Webs Myth: All spiders make webs.Fact: Technically, a web is not just anything a spider makes out of silk; it is a silk structure made to catch prey. Only about half of the known spider species catch prey by means of webs. Others (shown above) actively hunt for prey (including members of the wolf spider, jumping spider, ground spider, sac spider, lynx spider, and other spider families), or sit and wait for prey to come to them (trap door Spiders, crab spiders, and others).
Hunting spiders use their silk for the dragline (the single thread all spiders leave behind them when they walk), the egg sac, and in some species, the retreat (a little silk "house" the spider rests in), all shown below, but do not make true webs.
In Indiana, the most common brown spiders are the brown recluse and the funnel weaver spider. Brown recluses have a distinctive violin-shaped mark on their back, while funnel weavers are known for their funnel-shaped webs. It's important to be cautious around both types of spiders, as brown recluses can deliver a venomous bite.
All spiders are carnivorous. The brown recluse is a hunting spider, meaning it doesn't build webs to catch prey but must instead search out its own meals.
You can learn how to catch insects.You can learn how they make their webs.
No they are not
The tan and black spider with horns on its back is the Arrow-shaped Micrathena. These spiders spin their webs in spirals and hang in the center of the web, often mistaken for a piece of wood or leaf.
The general body plan of an arachnid consists of a cephalothorax (head area), the opisthosoma (abdomen), chelicerae and fangs, pedipalps, eight legs (all of which connect on the cephalothorax), and spinerettes (found on the opisthosoma).
Because the spider could not put a lot of webs in him.if it did he would not have unlimited webs.
no
Brown recluse spiders are found all over the Southern United States. They prefer to create webs in dark places, such as under rocks or piles of wood and eat insects, such as grasshoppers.
The brown recluse spider is nocturnal, which means it searches for food during the nighttime hours. It is also a scavenger, preferring to feed on dead insects rather than live ones. If the brown recluse spider cannot find any dead insects, however, it will kill live ones, and it can travel quite a far distance from its web to find an insect to kill, often ending up indoors, where it will hide in items like shoes and clothing on the floor when daylight arrives. Read more: How Does a Brown Recluse Spider Kill Its Prey? | eHow.com
spiders make webs
No, spider webs are not conductive.
No
A spider has venomous fangs to paralyse its prey.
No. Tigers are no afraid of spider webs. It is doubtful that spider webs matter to them at all.
You can make a fake spider web by using yarn, dipping it into a water/corn starch mixture to stiffen the yarn, and 'unraveling' the yard to make that stringy look. Here are more complicated ideas: http://stubbs.hubpages.com/hub/How-To-Make-Halloween-Spider-Webs
most tarantulas don't make webs