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  2. Spider anatomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_anatomy

    Spiders have developed several different respiratory anatomies, based either on book lungs or on tracheae. Mesothele and mygalomorph spiders have two pairs of book lungs filled with haemolymph, where openings on the ventral surface of the abdomen allow air to enter and oxygen to diffuse in and carbon dioxide to diffuse out.

  3. Spider behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_behavior

    Bolas: Bolas spiders are unusual orb-weaver spiders that do not spin the webs. Instead, they hunt by using a sticky 'capture blob' of silk on the end of a line, known as a ' bolas '. By swinging the bolas at flying male moths or moth flies nearby, the spider may snag its prey rather like a fisherman snagging a fish on a hook.

  4. Spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider

    Spiders can generate pressures up to eight times their resting level to extend their legs, [39] and jumping spiders can jump up to 50 times their own length by suddenly increasing the blood pressure in the third or fourth pair of legs. [13] Although larger spiders use hydraulics to straighten their legs, unlike smaller jumping spiders they ...

  5. Ballooning (spider) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ballooning_(spider)

    Most ballooning journeys end after just a few meters of travel, although depending on the spider's mass and posture, [16] a spider might be taken up into a jet stream. The trajectory further depends on the convection air currents and the drag of the silk and parachute to float and travel high up into the upper atmosphere. [17]

  6. Social spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_spider

    A collective web of Agelena consociata in Uganda.. A social spider is a spider species whose individuals form relatively long-lasting aggregations.Whereas most spiders are solitary and even aggressive toward other members of their own species, some hundreds of species in several families show a tendency to live in groups, often referred to as colonies.

  7. Creepy, crawly and invasive. Are hand-sized Joro spiders in Ohio?

    www.aol.com/creepy-crawly-invasive-hand-sized...

    The spiders travel by "ballooning", sending up a strand of silk that catches the wind and carries them through the sky. All it would take for a spider to get to Ohio is a favorable wind current.

  8. Araneomorphae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Araneomorphae

    The Araneomorphae, to the contrary, include the weavers of spiral webs; the cobweb spiders that live in the corners of rooms, and between windows and screens; the crab spiders that lurk on the surfaces of flowers in gardens; the jumping spiders that are visible hunting on surfaces; the wolf spiders that carpet hunting sites in sunny spots; and ...

  9. Jumping spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumping_spider

    Even with all the other pairs covered, jumping spiders in a study could still detect, stalk, and attack flies, using their ALEs only, which are also sufficiently widely spaced to provide stereoscopic vision. [14] The anterior median eyes have very good vision. This pair of eyes is built like a telescopic tube with a corneal lens in the front ...