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Funnel weaver spider & stone centipede

Tegenaria domestica / Lithobiomorpha sp.

Description:

Barn funnel weavers are active and agile hunters, relying on both their vision and movement speed as well as web mechanisms. Their eye configuration, with six out of eight sighting forward, allows them to distinguish even the smallest movement in front of them and either follow it, or retreat, if the movement is too considerable. These spiders are also known to be photosensitive, i.e. moving to or fleeing from the light, depending on situations. Like many agelenids, barn funnel weavers are very precise in their movements. Instead of following a continuous gait pattern, they usually move in short intervals, stopping several times before deciding where to head next. Males will wander aimlessly around the house if undisturbed, but will soon switch to the running interval if prey or threat are spotted. Their legs are perfectly fit for walking (with tarsi bent outward on the tips) and spiders can run over quite long distances in both situations. This spider builds a funnel-shaped web to catch its prey. It usually consists of a multitude of stressed silk threads spun over a flat surface (such as a window sill) near any corner, with a funnel-like structure reaching for the corner, in which the spider would typically reside (hence the name). These webs can become quite large if undisturbed. They act like cord strings, helping the spider glide over them, and once a prey stumbles into the web, it will quickly get attacked, then dragged inside the funnel part and eaten, but very rarely stored underneath the structure. Females that dwell indoors would usually live for over one or two years on the same web, with some residing for as long as seven years in rarely disturbed places (attics, basement or cellar parts, storage rooms, etc.). Outdoor females perish with cold weather and males rarely live for over a year. In late Fall, an egg sac is made containing up to 50 eggs and put in the very tip of the funnel, protected by the female. The spiderlings will hatch in early to mid April and go over seven molts to reach adulthood.

Habitat:

Semi rural. Found under a rock in our woods.

Notes:

This spider has a substantial meal in its larder!

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5 Comments

KarenL
KarenL 12 years ago

Thanks Carol - there are very few rocks left unturned in our woods!

CarolSnowMilne
CarolSnowMilne 12 years ago

Awesome photo!

KarenL
KarenL 12 years ago

Thanks Lars!

LarsKorb
LarsKorb 12 years ago

Nice catch of that juvenile specimen with the centipede at one spot. Here's his parents, Karen ;)
http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/897...

KarenL
KarenL 12 years ago

Thanks Francis!

KarenL
Spotted by
KarenL

Franklin, Tennessee, USA

Spotted on Mar 6, 2012
Submitted on Mar 6, 2012

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