Got this info from ask.com = • • •
The Spider Myths Site
• • • = You Are Here: Burke Museum : Spider Myths : General : Webs Myth: All spiders make webs. Wolf spider
Pardosa vancouveri
(photo: Rod Crawford)
Click image to enlarge Ground spider
Zelotes fratris
(from a photo by Markku Savela)
Click image to enlarge Crab spider
Misumena vatia
(from a photo by Bob Thomson)
Click image to enlarge Examples of 3 hunting spider families, which make no 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.
The web is spun by silk, the spider moves and relecies the silk in streight lines then goes diaganal ect ...
Technically speaking, yes, spiders spin webs from their bottom.
Spiders can spin varying amounts of web each day depending on factors like their size, species, and energy levels. On average, some smaller spiders can spin up to 2-3 feet of web in a day, while larger species like orb weavers can spin several meters.
mine lives in a burrow, but i have heard nest, aerie, white house. the latter is only for the bush recluse of course.
A long-legged relative of the spider that does not spin a web is a harvestman, also known as a daddy longlegs. These arachnids are classified in the order Opiliones and do not produce silk or build webs. Instead, they are primarily scavengers feeding on small insects and plant material.
The lynx spider does spin webs but only for one reason, to hold the eggs. otherwise this spider does not use a large web for catching its prey.
Ask a spider
Camel spider A dead one
Spiders of both sexes spin webs.
spin a orb
it stores the web in it's spinnerets
"its" is a possessive pronoun. "spin" should be "spins".
The web is spun by silk, the spider moves and relecies the silk in streight lines then goes diaganal ect ...
10thousand years
The triangular spider spins spiral, wheel-shaped webs, that are often found in gardens.
they cach bugs in their webs,kill the bugs, spin hem with there web,then eat them
It is most likely because of the type of spider and the type of web the spider spins. If it is a thin web, then the spider needs at least 3 corners to work. thik webs usually are spun in bushes or somewhere they can have full range to attatch a web strand to.