Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Orb Weaver Spider

Description:

The family Araneidae is diverse; orb weavers vary in colors, sizes, and shapes. The webs of orb weavers consist of radial strands, like spokes of a wheel, and concentric circles. Most orb weavers build their webs vertically, attaching them to branches, stems, or manmade structures. Araneidae webs may be quite large, spanning several feet in width. All members of the family Araneidae possess eight similar eyes, arranged in two rows of four eyes each. Despite this, they have rather poor eyesight and rely on vibrations within the web to alert them to meals. Orb weavers have four to six spinnerets, from which they produce strands of silk. Many orb weavers are brightly colored, and have hairy or spiny legs.

Habitat:

Orb weaver spiders live throughout the world, with the exceptions of the Arctic and Antarctic regions. In North America, there are approximately 180 species of orb weavers. Worldwide, arachnologists describe over 3,500 species in the family Araneidae.

Notes:

Like all spiders, orb weavers are carnivores. They feed primarily on insects and other small organisms entrapped in their sticky webs. Some larger orb weavers may even consume hummingbirds or frogs they’ve successfully ensnared. Reproduction Male orb weavers occupy most of their time with finding a mate. Most males are much smaller than females, and after mating may become her next meal. The female waits on or near her web, letting the males come to her. She lays eggs in clutches of several hundred, encased in a sac. In areas with cold winters, the female orb weaver will lay a large clutch in the fall and wrap it in thick silk. She will die when the first frost arrives, leaving her babies to hatch in the spring. Orb weavers live one to two years, on average. Adaptions etc. The orb weaver's web is a masterful creation, designed to ensnare meals efficiently. The spokes of the web are primarily non-sticky silk, and serve as walkways for the spider to move about the web. The circular strands do the dirty work. Insects become stuck to the these sticky threads on contact. Most orb weavers are nocturnal. During daylight hours, the spider may retreat to a nearby branch or leaf, but will spin a trapline from the web. Any slight vibration of the web will travel down the trapline, alerting her to a potential catch. The orb weaver possesses venom, which she uses to immobilize her prey. When threatened by people or most anything larger than herself, an orb weaver's first response is to flee. Rarely, if handled, will she bite; when she does, the bite is mild.

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

No Comments

katie.hazin
Spotted by
katie.hazin

Alberta, Canada

Spotted on Sep 27, 2011
Submitted on Oct 21, 2011

Spotted for Mission

Related Spottings

Spiny Orb-Weaver Spider Spiny Orb-Weaver Spider Orb-Weaver Spider Orb-weaver spider

Nearby Spottings

Eastern American Toad Black-capped chickadee Crow Muskrat
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team