The Life of the Spider eBook

Jean Henri Fabre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Life of the Spider.

The Life of the Spider eBook

Jean Henri Fabre
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 249 pages of information about The Life of the Spider.

In twenty-four hours, the threads have lost their contents and are reduced to almost invisible streaks.  If I then lay a drop of water on the glass, I get a sticky solution, similar to that which a particle of gum arabic might yield.  The conclusion is evident:  the Epeira’s glue is a substance that absorbs moisture freely.  In an atmosphere with a high degree of humidity, it becomes saturated and percolates by sweating through the side of the tubular threads.

These data explain certain facts relating to the work of the net.  The full-grown Banded and Silky Epeirae weave at very early hours, long before dawn.  Should the air turn misty, they sometimes leave that part of the task unfinished:  they build the general framework, they lay the spokes, they even draw the auxiliary spiral, for all these parts are unaffected by excess of moisture; but they are very careful not to work at the lime-threads, which, if soaked by the fog, would dissolve into sticky shreds and lose their efficacy by being wetted.  The net that was started will be finished to-morrow, if the atmosphere be favourable.

While the highly-absorbent character of the snaring-thread has its drawbacks, it also has compensating advantages.  Both Epeirae, when hunting by day, affect those hot places, exposed to the fierce rays of the sun, wherein the Crickets delight.  In the torrid heats of the dog-days, therefore, the lime-threads, but for special provisions, would be liable to dry up, to shrivel into stiff and lifeless filaments.  But the very opposite happens.  At the most scorching times of the day, they continue supple, elastic and more and more adhesive.

How is this brought about?  By their very powers of absorption.  The moisture of which the air is never deprived penetrates them slowly; it dilutes the thick contents of their tubes to the requisite degree and causes it to ooze through, as and when the earlier stickiness decreases.  What bird-catcher could vie with the Garden Spider in the art of laying lime-snares?  And all this industry and cunning for the capture of a Moth!

Then, too, what a passion for production!  Knowing the diameter of the orb and the number of coils, we can easily calculate the total length of the sticky spiral.  We find that, in one sitting, each time that she remakes her web, the Angular Epeira produces some twenty yards of gummy thread.  The more skilful Silky Epeira produces thirty.  Well, during two months, the Angular Epeira, my neighbour, renewed her snare nearly every evening.  During that period, she manufactured something like three-quarters of a mile of this tubular thread, rolled into a tight twist and bulging with glue.

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The Life of the Spider from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.