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Spiders
American House Spider Description Male 1/8-1/4" (4-5 mm), female 1/4" (5-6 mm).
Yellowish brown. Abdomen streaked and splotched with black and gray on sides.
Male's legs orangish; female's yellow with black bands.
Food Insects.
Web Irregular, made of sticky strands. Webs catch dust as
well as prey and are known as cobwebs.
Life Cycle Female spins pear-shaped brownish silken cocoon
around egg mass and hangs it in web. Adult females can live more than a
year.
Habitat Sheltered corners of houses, barns, and other
buildings. Black Widow Spider

SIZE: About 1 1/2 inches (38mm) long, 1/4 inch (6.4mm) in diameter
COLOR: Usually shiny black
DESCRIPTION: The female is usually black with a red spot or hourglass- shaped
mark on its round abdomen. The male usually has light streaks on its abdomen.
HABITAT: Black widow spiders are common around wood piles, and are frequently
encountered when homeowners carry firewood into the house. Also found under
eaves, in boxes, outdoor toilets, meter boxes, and other unbothered places.
LIFE CYCLE: Egg sacs are brown, papery, about ½ inch long and oval. They hold
from 25 to 900 or more eggs, which have an incubation period of 20 days. Growth
requires two to three months, with older females dying in autumn after egg
laying.
TYPE OF DAMAGE: The black widow is not aggressive. It will, however, bite
instinctively when touched or pressed.
CONTROL: Be very careful when working around areas where black widow spiders
may be established. Take proper precautions-wear gloves and pay attention to
where you are working. Black widow bites are sharp and painful, and the victim
should go to the doctor immediately for treatment. To control the black widow,
carefully remove all materials where they might hide. They can be cleaned out of
an area simply by knocking down the webs, spiders, and round tan egg sacs with a
stick and crushing them underfoot.
INTERESTING FACTS: The female eats the male after mating. She hangs belly
upward and rarely leaves the web.
Brown Recluse Spider

SIZE: 1/4 to 3/4 inch (6.4-19.1mm)
COLOR: Golden brown
DESCRIPTION: Brown recluse spiders belong to a group of spiders commonly
known as violin spiders or fiddlebacks. This is because of a characteristic
fiddle-shaped pattern they have on their head region. The spider is golden brown
with the fiddle being dark brown or black. This spider is not hairy and the
fiddle pattern is often shiny. They are about 1/4 to 3/4 inch long.
HABITAT: Brown recluse spiders are found primarily in the Midwest. Many cases
of bites are reported from Texas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma. The edge of
its range just reaches the tip of western Virginia, but it occurs rarely in this
state. The spider commonly lives in basements and garages of houses and often
hides behind boards and boxes. Bites often occur when the spiders hide in towels
or old clothes left in those areas.
LIFE CYCLE: Female deposits eggs in off-white silken cases about 1/3 inch in
diameter in sheltered, dark areas. Spiderlings emerge in 24-36 days and abandon
the egg case. Development is slow, influenced by weather conditions and food
availability. They reach maturity in 10 to 12 months and can survive long
periods of time without food or water.
TYPE OF DAMAGE: The severity of the bite may vary. The symptoms may vary from
no harm at all to a reaction that is very severe. Often there is a systemic
reaction within 24-36 hours characterized by restlessness, fever, chills,
nausea, weakness, and joint pain. Where the bite occurs there is often tissue
death and skin is sloughed off. In some severe cases, a wound may develop that
lasts several months.
CONTROL: In all cases, a physician should be notified. If at all possible,
kill and take the spider to the physician for positive identification.
Individual spiders can be crushed underfoot or sprayed with an aerosol spray.
Clean up and remove any potential hiding places.
Important note: Many of the wolf spiders are similar in appearance and have
similar markings as the brown recluse. They are large, robust, and hairy and,
therefore, can be distinguished from the brown recluse.
INTERESTING FACTS: Spiders are seldom aggressive and bite only when
threatened or injured.
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Cellar Spiders

Cellar Spiders
are in the family Pholcidae. Spiders in this family typically
have extremely long and skinny legs with small bodies. Common
species are usually tan or gray. The web of a cellar spider
is usually very messy, similar to the web of a cobweb spider. Like
all spiders, cellar spiders have 8 legs, 2 body parts, and fang-like
mouthparts called "chelicerae."
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| SIZE:
Body length of adult cellar spiders about 1/4" or less |
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| LIFE
CYCLE |
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Simple
metamorphosis: like all spiders, young cellar spiders hatch from
eggs and look like tiny adults. They shed their skin as they
grow. Females lay a few dozen eggs at a time and wrap them
in webbing for protection.
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| ECOLOGY |
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Cellar spiders often
make their stringy webs indoors, preferring shady corners in basements,
attics, barns, and sheds. They feed on small moths, flies,
gnats, mosquitoes, and other creatures that are common indoors.
When they are not living in buildings, cellar spiders are
sometimes found in protected natural areas, including caves and
rock piles.
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| PEST
STATUS |
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Cellar
spiders are common in homes, but they typically stay in one place
and don't bother people. They are not known to bite. | Cellar spiders are
also sometimes called "daddy-long-legs spiders," which
is the same name given to the spider-like harvestmen
in the order Opiliones. A widespread myth is that "the
daddy-long-legs is the world's most venomous spider." Although
it is unclear to which creature this myth is referring, it is
not true in either case.
Garden Spider ( Barn Spider)

Description
The Barn Spider is an orb weaver, a spider that spins
its web in a circle-type shape. This orb weaver is about
3/4 inch long with a large round abdomen.
It spins a large orb web, hangs its head down in the
middle at night and retreats to a nearby crevice during
the day.
This spider is a dark brown color, with darker markings
on the back of the abdomen. Its legs are slightly covered
with whitish hairs. Habitat
Barn Spiders are found all over the eastern part United
States. They can be found on porches near lights, in
the corners of doorways, in window frames -- anywhere
conducive for constructing the large orb web. You can
even find them on the sides of cliffs, in caves, and
in barns!
In late afternoon and at night, the barn spider can
be seen hanging in the center of its web. During the
day, the barn spider will retreat to a nearby crevice
only to return to the web the next night. Food
The Barn Spider preys on flying and crawling insects
that become entangled in her orb web. The spider will
vibrate or sway the web if she senses that prey may
be caught in it.
The web itself is used to wrap the prey and soon becomes
full of holes and ragged. After several days, the spider
will eat the web, recycle the silk, and construct a
new web.
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St. Andrew's Cross Spider
 Description
The Black and Yellow Garden Spider or St Andrew's Cross Spider, sometimes called
the Argiope, is a member of the orb weaver family. These
are spiders that spin webs in spiral patterns.
The female Argiope is a large, conspicuous spider up
to 1-1/8 inch long at maturity. The large abdomen is
black with yellow or orange markings. The carapace of
the cephalothorax is covered with silvery hairs, and
their legs are black with reddish or yellow bands .
There is a large difference in size between the male
and female of this spider species. The male is about
half the size of the female, and similar but often brighter
in color. Habitat
Black and Yellow Garden Spiders are located all around
the United States and even in southern Canada. This
spider can be found in gardens or open fields where
the large orb web (up to 2 feet wide!) can be spun.
The slightly inclined orb web has a distinctive vertical
zigzag design in the center (called stabilimenta). The
exact purpose of the stabilimenta is not known, but
it has been thought that it may aid in web stabilization,
aid in the capture of prey, or prevent birds from flying
through it.
The spider hangs its head down in the center of the
web
Food
The circular filaments of the orb
web are sticky so that the spider may capture small
flying insects such as flies, grasshoppers, crickets,
wasps, and bees. This spider is diurnal (active in the
daytime) and usually hangs head down in the center of
the web.
If movement in the web is detected,
the spider will often wave or vibrate the web in order
to entangle the prey. Entangled prey is immediately
wrapped with swaths of silk and bitten with fangs in
order to subdue it. Defense
The coloration, size, and web of this spider at maturity
make it conspicuous in the garden. The zigzag design
in the center of the web may help to camouflage the
spider.
Some scientists theorize that the stabilimenta (zigzag)
in the center of the web serves to make the web more
easily seen by birds that will then avoid flying through
it.
If threatened, the spider may drop off the web to the
ground and hide.
Harvestmen

Description
Found in temperate climates, this animal is related
to spiders, but is not a true spider. A true spider
has two body parts, a cephalothorax and an abdomen.
The Eastern Daddy Longlegs has just one flat, oval
body part. They are about 1/8 inch to 1/2 inch long.
They have eight legs that are extremely long in comparison
to the size of the body.
The Daddy Longlegs moves about on the tips of the legs
as if walking on stilts. The name Harvestman comes from
the fact that they are seen in great numbers in the
fall of the year.
Habitat
Harvestmen and Daddy Longlegs are found throughout
North America. They prefer to live in leaf foliage,
on the trunks of trees, and in shrubbery.
They often congregate in large numbers, particularly
in the fall of the year.
Food
Daddy Longlegs feed on live or dead insects and invertebrates
such as flies, aphids, snails, and earthworms. They
also feed on decaying vegetation.
They are nocturnal and do their scavenging for food
at night. Defense
Harvestmen have the ability to break off a leg if threatened.
The leg will continue to twitch in front of the predator
while the Harvestman escapes.
Some species have stink glands that release an unpleasant
odor that repels predators, but they do not have any
venom.
Since they resemble spiders, the Daddy Longlegs "mimics"
the characteristics of an insect predator. If disturbed,
it will wave its second pair of legs in the air.

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Jumping Spider

Description
Could you ever call a spider "cute"? Well, the audacious
jumping spider, Phidippus audax, would certainly
qualify!
This alert little jumper is a keen-sighted hunter.
It stalks its prey and leaps upon it! It is one of the
largest of the Jumping Spiders.
The male can be 1/2 inch long, and the female can be
up to 5/8 inch long.
It has a hairy body, and its abdomen is black with
white spots. The front pair of legs has black and white
stripes and its handsome jaws are a "metallic" green!
Two of its eight eyes are very large for its size.
Habitat
The Daring Jumping Spider can be found in the United
States from the Atlantic Coast to the Rocky Mountains.
Look for this spider in Virginia woods, grassy areas,
and in gardens around fallen leaves and tree limbs,
stones, and flowers.
Sometimes it even wanders inside houses or will land
from its jumps on the sides of tree trunks!
Food
This hunting spider is entertaining to watch. It stalks
its insect prey through the grass, leaping 40 or more
times its length to capture its food.
It uses a silken dragline as a safety line before jumping.
It sticks the dragline on an object, leaps, and if it
misses its prey, can recover by crawling back up the
dragline.
 Defense
This spider's black and white coloration helps it to
blend into crevices.
Its ability to jump great distances is a good defense
as well as offense because it can readily escape danger
by jumping quickly away.
Its use of its dragline as a safety line helps protect
the spider from "hard landings" if it should miss its
mark.
Grass Spider
 Description
The Grass Spider is light brown in color, with darker
brown stripes on its cephalothorax and its abdomen.
Its body is slender and the male is 5/8 inch long.
The female is 3/4 inch long and has very large rear
spinnerets.
The Grass Spider is a funnel web weaver, meaning that
it belongs to the family of spiders that spins a web
that covers plants like a sheet with one end shaped
like a funnel.
Habitat
The Grass Spider is found almost everywhere in North
America! It lives around grassy areas, stone fences,
and small shrubs.
It builds its web down in crevices, under stones, or
between leaves or twigs (often in "leaf litter").
This spider tends to stay in one location, and as it
grows, its web increases in size until the sheet extends
over a large area.
Food
The Grass Spider waits inside of its funnel for small
crawling or flying insects like crickets, ants, and
grasshoppers.
When its prey walks across the sheet-like portion of
its web, it can feel the vibrations "telegraphed" by
the insect.
The GrassSpider then dashes out of the funnel to grab
its prey and drag it back down into the funnel for its
feast!
Defense
Although the Grass Spider likes to hide from both predators
and prey down in its funnel, it always "plans" an escape
route from predators when it builds its web.
The funnel part of the web is open at both ends. So,
if it is threatened, the spider can escape out the "back
door!"

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Wolf Spider
 Description
Wolf spiders have a stout, heavy body shape, and fat
legs. They are usually brown in color and may have white
stripes.
Size may vary from 1/2 inch to 1-1/2 inches.
There are eight well developed eyes, placed in a distinct
pattern. There is a row of four small eyes. There are
two large eyes above the four small eyes. Two more smaller
eyes look straight upward.
 Habitat
Wolf Spiders are found on the ground in open fields
throughout the United States and southern Canada.
Many Wolf Spiders are diurnal, meaning that they are
active and hunt for prey during the day. Often they
are found resting under leaves or stones.
However, some species dig a burrow, line it with silk,
and lurk there during the day waiting for prey to pass
close, and actively hunt at night (nocturnal).
Food
Wolf Spiders don't spin webs to catch their prey. Rather,
they are hunters that run down their prey and capture
it, just like a real wolf.
Wolf Spiders have good eyesight compared to other spiders.
The wolf spider can run fast and quickly pounce on its
prey, and bite it with its powerful jaws.
The Wolf Spider eats many kinds of small insects, including
crickets, grasshoppers, earwigs, flies, and ants.
Defense
The brown coloration helps these spiders blend in with
the environment. They hide under stones and leaves for
protection.
Some dig deep burrows with the entrances camouflaged
with sticks and twigs.
This spider is keen sighted so that it can successfully
stalk its prey. It is also very sensitive to vibrations.
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