chantler63

By chantler63

Spider Stack

This is a focus-stacked image of of the spiders in yesterday's blip. A view of the whole web gives a better indication of how small they are. I looked up some information on our web t understand them better. their chances of survival to adulthood are low!

Spider Information:
The Garden cross spider (Araneus diadematus) is a common site found in gardens up and down the country between June and November. As one of our largest spiders this ‘orb-web spider’ cannot be missed due to its highly distinctive cross of pale spots across its bulbous abdomen. The adult females grow to 15mm (body length), and males to 9mm. Their colours range from a sandy brown to burnt orange or even almost completely black.

Garden cross spiders weave enormous and conspicuous orb webs. These busy spiders are night spinners, weaving gloriously elaborate silk web in preparation for a day of hunting to catch their prey, including a host of garden visitors such as butterflies, wasps and flies. If you accidentally disturb a Garden cross spider on its web it will use it legs to oscillate itself up and down and shake the web, and if it is very severely disturbed, it will drop from its web on a silk thread and lie still until its convinced the danger has passed on and then it will climb back to its web.

Females protect their eggs by building a silk egg sac, in which they lay their eggs. Once filled with eggs a female will not leave the sac, she will spend her life protecting it and she will eventually die in late autumn before her spiderlings hatch in the following May when a mass of young spiderlings each with yellow abdomen and a dark patch hatch out of the egg sac.

Once hatched they collect together into a bright yellow bundle of tiny spiders and, if disturbed, they will wildly scatter, only reassembling when the danger has moved on. After their first moult they will separate, living individually and maturing into fully grown adult spiders after two years.

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