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Spiderweb lit up with the early morning winter sun.

During the process of making an orb web, the spider will use its own body for measurements.

Many webs span gaps between objects which the spider could not cross by crawling. This is done by first producing a fine adhesive thread to drift on a faint breeze across a gap. When it sticks to a surface at the far end, the spider feels the change in the vibration. The spider reels in and tightens the first strand, then carefully walks along it and strengthens it with a second thread. This process is repeated until the thread is strong enough to support the rest of the web.

After strengthening the first thread, the spider continues to make a Y-shaped netting. The first three radials of the web are now constructed. More radials are added, making sure that the distance between each radial and the next is small enough to cross. This means that the number of radials in a web directly depends on the size of the spider plus the size of the web. It is common for a web to be about 20 times the size of the spider building it.

After the radials are complete, the spider fortifies the center of the web with about five circular threads. It makes a spiral of non-sticky, widely spaced threads to enable it to move easily around its own web during construction, working from the inside, outward. Then, beginning from the outside and moving inward, the spider methodically replaces this spiral with a more closely spaced one made of adhesive threads. It uses the initial radiating lines as well as the non-sticky spirals as guide lines. The spaces between each spiral and the next are directly proportional to the distance from the tip of its back legs to its spinners. This is one way the spider uses its own body as a measuring/spacing device. While the sticky spirals are formed, the non-adhesive spirals are removed as there is no need for them any more.

 

After the spider has completed its web, it chews off the initial three center spiral threads then sits and waits. If the web is broken without any structural damage during the construction, the spider does not make any initial attempts to rectify the problem.

The spider, after spinning its web, then waits on or near the web for a prey animal to become trapped. The spider senses the impact and struggle of a prey animal by vibrations transmitted through the web. A spider positioned in the middle of the web makes for a highly visible prey for birds and other predators, even without web decorations; many day-hunting orb-web spinners reduce this risk by hiding at the edge of the web with one foot on a signal line from the hub or by appearing to be inedible or unappetizing.

Spiders do not usually adhere to their own webs, because they are able to spin both sticky and non-sticky types of silk, and are careful to travel across only non-sticky portions of the web. However, they are not immune to their own glue. Some of the strands of the web are sticky, and others are not. For example, if a spider has chosen to wait along the outer edges of its web, it may spin a non-sticky prey or signal line to the web hub to monitor web movement.

A Nursery Web Spider in Pasir Ris Park Mangroves Forest.

Go wild with me in my blog: Go Wild at Pasir Ris Park and Mangroves

 

*Note: More pics of Insects and Arachnids in my Fauna ~ Invertebrates Album.

Misty morning in Wendover Woods.

best viewed large

 

Fall morning sun

Spiderwebs abound,

Dewdrops glisten

This web is as it was taken with just a small crop to take out an annoying dead leaf.

Rain droplets on a spiders web

Dew on a spiders web.

No , just a piece of a leaf trapped in a web .

Cologne/Köln, Germany. 2016

This web I found in my garden attached to a tree.

 

Feel free to comment on all of my photos, please tell me if you dont like something about it. Thanks

Mérito de mi hermana Elia quién tomó esta hermosa foto...

 

Camera: Nikon D90

Exposure: 1/125

Aperture: Æ’/5.6

Exposure Program: Auto

Focal Length: 98 mm

ISO Speed: 200

Lens: Nikkor AF-S DX 18-105 G ED VR

Lionfish. Denver Aquarium.

 

Click here to see a long exposure of this fish

www.flickr.com/photos/ajschroetlin/340700915/

25.8.14... a web across our front door. Looks like I've been a bit lax with the dusting lately!!!

Spider web found 12/29 at Oakland Nature Preserve. It was a dark area in the preserve but there was enough light to create a nice reflection on the web.

   

Holland Landing, Ontario

#8 web/ 111 pictures in 2011

Yorkshire Wildlife Park - 27th May 2013

Spider's web covered in the moisture from a foggy morning at Djurön, Sweden

Photo taken in the Harcourt Wildlife Sanctuary, New Paltz, NY.

Check out the large veiw.

 

On several lines actually.

So sorry for not posting in a few weeks. Homework has been terrible -_- I kind of want to make doll videos, but at the same time I know I'd be wasting my time because I have so much other stuff that needs to be done...meh. However, I'm kind of in a happy mood because I got a regional silver key in the Scholastic Writing Awards. Last year, I got an honorable mention. I'd say that's a step up. XD Oh yeah...I just realized that this picture has my last initial on it. Oh well. :P

What self-respecting spider would weave a PINK web?

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

It can be a little alarming to look out over a meadow at morning and see all the spider webs, made visible by droplets of dew. Right now, hardly a bush nor clump of wild grass isn't crowned by the bizarre, double layered web of the Bowl-and-Doily Spider (an insect is knocked out of the air by the tangle of webs above, then falls into the bowl below, where the tiny spider is waiting). When the dew evaporates, the webs disappear -- you'd never even know they're there!

 

Credit: Michael Schramm/USFWS

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