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  2. File:Kleptoparasitism video - Fly feeding on captured prey of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Kleptoparasitism...

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  3. Meatless Flyday - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meatless_Flyday

    An overconfident and guffawing spider (voiced by Cy Kendall) spots his intended prey, a mute fly, on the ceiling, and indulges in various cat-and-mouse schemes to try to catch him for food, including painting a load of buckshot with "Kandy Kolor" and luring the fly to eat it and drawing him closer with a magnet, which only succeeds in attracting a set of metal cutlery which the spider has to ...

  4. Arachnura higginsi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arachnura_higginsi

    The prominent tail looks somewhat similar to that of a scorpion but has no sting and the spider is not considered to be dangerous to humans. The spider's web is usually located close to the ground, and may be oriented vertically, on an angle, or sometimes horizontally. The spider's usual prey consists of small flying insects.

  5. Pseudostigmatidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pseudostigmatidae

    To catch a spider they first fly backward, then quickly fly forward to grab it in their forelegs. Then they back away again and perch to consume the spider, removing the legs before eating the body. Though this careful forward-and-back approach minimizes contact with the web, they often preen after eating to remove any strands that do adhere to ...

  6. Jumping spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jumping_spider

    [28] [29] When a jumping spider moves from place to place, and especially just before it jumps, it tethers a filament of silk (or 'dragline') to whatever it is standing on. [3] [5] This dragline provides a mechanical aid to jumping, including braking and stabilization [28] [30] and if the jump should fail, the spider climbs back up the dragline ...

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  8. Trite auricoma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trite_auricoma

    If there is a fly within 15 cm of the front of the spider, the spider becomes alert. In the first stage, the legs and abdomen are shifted and straightened. The hind legs then become drawn in and the spider begins to slowly move towards the prey. Once the spider is 3–4 cm from its prey, it leaps and pierces the prey with its fangs.

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