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OT : Spiders in Georgia, specifically the whore spider
Posted on 8/12/18 at 5:41 pm
Posted on 8/12/18 at 5:41 pm
This is probably Germans as the article is a few yeas old, but anybody see one of these in GA?
Nephila clavata, a large, orb-weaving arachnid, has taken up residence in northern Georgia, recent research shows. joro-gumo, which means "binding bride" or "whore spider."
Nephila clavata, a large, orb-weaving arachnid, has taken up residence in northern Georgia, recent research shows. joro-gumo, which means "binding bride" or "whore spider."
Posted on 8/12/18 at 6:22 pm to Cheese Grits
Can't ride my atv around dusk here in TN, they are everywhere on my property.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 6:32 pm to lewis and herschel
Are they like fire ants and they stop at TN because of weather or have they migrated north like killer bees?
Posted on 8/12/18 at 6:33 pm to Cheese Grits
Those frickers own South Florida.
Had one in my back yard as big as my hand. Scared me all summer. I finally threw a beach ball at it. Never saw it after that so they aren’t omnipotent, which is nice.
Had one in my back yard as big as my hand. Scared me all summer. I finally threw a beach ball at it. Never saw it after that so they aren’t omnipotent, which is nice.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 7:18 pm to DawgCountry
At least we are in the USA and not India.
Millions of spiders spinning webs in the trees.
I would never sleep a wink
Millions of spiders spinning webs in the trees.
I would never sleep a wink
Posted on 8/12/18 at 7:19 pm to Cheese Grits
Holy crap.
Time to bring in the crop dusters for a round DDT.
Time to bring in the crop dusters for a round DDT.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 7:31 pm to Cheese Grits
That’s a beautiful creature.
Is it even poisonous? Or are domesticated low T victims freaking out over a moth that can spin webs??
Is it even poisonous? Or are domesticated low T victims freaking out over a moth that can spin webs??
Posted on 8/12/18 at 8:00 pm to Cheese Grits
Stuff like that has happened in Texas, too.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 8:04 pm to Cheese Grits
Look like banana spiders which have been around for while i think.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 8:58 pm to Jefferson Dawg
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9IW0EbTF2w
New Zealand monster spider web looks beautiful. Think of it in the mourning dew.
New Zealand monster spider web looks beautiful. Think of it in the mourning dew.
Posted on 8/12/18 at 9:47 pm to Cheese Grits
I work in the woods ( Forestry ) and see these all the time... they look so tough... their bite hurts a little bit... not as bad as a bee sting... but it does hurt...
These are actually beautiful to me...
These are actually beautiful to me...
Posted on 8/12/18 at 10:32 pm to K9
quote:
Look like banana spiders which have been around for while i think.
+1
Banana spiders are a type of orb weaver... Sounds like in the same family at least. And yeah, they're all over North Florida and South Georgia... Don't see them up here in Atlanta area, but every time I go back home I help my mom knock a bunch of webs of the house and walking areas in the back yard...
Posted on 8/13/18 at 9:00 am to ugadawg30
quote:
These are actually beautiful to me...
Not disagreeing until you are hung over early in the morning and walk out your back door and directly into their web. Then it is all like...
Posted on 8/14/18 at 11:08 pm to Cheese Grits
Looks like a writing spider? I think they’ve been in Georgia for as long as I’ve been on the planet.
If you think that thing is sceeerry take a look at a Vinegaroon or giant whip scorpion. Most god awful looking critter on earth. They are very common in New Mexico. I carried 3 of them off the back porch this morning and put them in the cotton field behind the house. Wicked, nightmarish looking creature. Harmless though and keeps scorpions, roaches and tarantulas away from the house. My lab hates them....apparently their only defense is secreting an acid that smells like vinegar....she picked one up once and spit and foamed for a couple of hours!
If you think that thing is sceeerry take a look at a Vinegaroon or giant whip scorpion. Most god awful looking critter on earth. They are very common in New Mexico. I carried 3 of them off the back porch this morning and put them in the cotton field behind the house. Wicked, nightmarish looking creature. Harmless though and keeps scorpions, roaches and tarantulas away from the house. My lab hates them....apparently their only defense is secreting an acid that smells like vinegar....she picked one up once and spit and foamed for a couple of hours!
Posted on 8/16/18 at 10:14 am to Cheese Grits
I crushed a dirt dobber nest this week in my garage and to my surprise, it was full of zombie spiders.
All these years I never knew dirt dobber/daubers store paralyzed spiders inside for their larvae.
mud dauber wikipedia
All these years I never knew dirt dobber/daubers store paralyzed spiders inside for their larvae.
quote:
Like most other wasps, mud daubers are predators. The females not only build the nests, but also they hunt to provision them. However, pipe-organ mud dauber males have reportedly brought spiders to the nest, and they aid in nest guarding.
Black and yellow mud daubers primarily prey on relatively small, colorful spiders, such as crab spiders (and related groups), orb weavers and some jumping spiders. They usually find them in and around vegetation. Blue mud daubers are the main predator of the black and brown widow spiders.
Adults of both sexes frequently drink flower nectar, but they stock their nests with spiders, which serve as food for their offspring. Like connoisseurs, they prefer particular kinds of spiders, and particular sizes of spiders for their larders.
Instead of stocking a nest cell with one or two large spiders, mud daubers cram as many as two dozen small spiders into a nest cell. They appear to know exactly what they are hunting for, and where to find it.
To capture a spider, the wasp grabs it and stings it. The venom from the sting does not kill the spider, but paralyzes and preserves it so it can be transported and stored in the nest cell until consumed by the larva. A mud dauber usually lays its egg on the prey item and then seals it into the nest cell with a mud cap.[1] It then builds another cell or nest. Missouri’s mud daubers generally have two generations per year. The young survive the winter inside the nest.
mud dauber wikipedia
Posted on 8/16/18 at 8:30 pm to deeprig9
Yet another thing to thank God about every Sunday...that insects are no bigger than they are.
Posted on 8/16/18 at 8:52 pm to Cheese Grits
The only spiders I can’t stand are Pumpkin Spiders (think they’re also called European Garden Spiders)
Those bastard’s webs are massive and come hunting season you’re bound to run into them all over the place. Can’t count the number of times I’ve had them hit my face when riding on an ATV or when taking out the trash at night.
Those bastard’s webs are massive and come hunting season you’re bound to run into them all over the place. Can’t count the number of times I’ve had them hit my face when riding on an ATV or when taking out the trash at night.
Posted on 8/17/18 at 2:36 am to Go_Dawgs
From Spider ID LINK
Here is an article from National Geographic
Says they just invaded Georgia a few years ago from Asia.
Here is an article from National Geographic
Says they just invaded Georgia a few years ago from Asia.
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