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  2. Spidroin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spidroin

    An individual spider spins a multitude of silk types, with each type emerging from its own distinctive set of abdominal silk glands.This complex silk machinery enables spiders to use task-specific silks (e.g., for web assembly, egg-case construction, prey wrapping, etc.). [10]

  3. Kraig Biocraft Laboratories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraig_Biocraft_Laboratories

    Kim Kraig Thompson, a retired lawyer, invented the protein expression platform in 2002, which would become the basis for Kraig Lab's work with spider silk. [3] He founded Kraig Biocraft Laboratories in April 2006 to develop and commercialize spider silks and other high-performance polymers gene and sequences using platform technology in combination with genetic engineering concepts.

  4. Spider silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_silk

    Spider silk structure: crystalline beta-sheets separated by amorphous linkages. Silks have a hierarchical structure. The primary structure is the amino acid sequence of its proteins (), mainly consisting of highly repetitive glycine and alanine blocks, [4] [5] which is why silks are often referred to as a block co-polymer.

  5. Dragon silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragon_silk

    Mature Silkworm before Spinning. Dragon silk is a material created by Kraig Biocraft Laboratories of Ann Arbor, Michigan from genetically modified silkworms to create body armor.

  6. Silkhenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silkhenge

    This spider -related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  7. Saguaro boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saguaro_boot

    Saguaro boot with US quarter to show scale. A saguaro boot is the hard shell of callus tissue, heavily impregnated with lignin, that a saguaro cactus (Carnegiea gigantea) creates to protect the wound created by a bird's nesting house . [1] The bird pecks through the cactus skin, then excavates downward to hollow out a space for its nest. [2]

  8. Theridiidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theridiidae

    Theridiidae, also known as the tangle-web spiders, cobweb spiders and comb-footed spiders, is a large family of araneomorph spiders first described by Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1833. [1]

  9. Ctenizidae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ctenizidae

    Ctenizidae (/ ˈ t ə n ɪ z ə d iː / tə-NIZZ-ə-dee) [2] is a small family of mygalomorph spiders that construct burrows with a cork-like trapdoor made of soil, vegetation, and silk. . They may be called trapdoor spiders, as are other, similar species, such as those of the families Liphistiidae, Barychelidae, and Cyrtaucheniidae, and some species in the Idiopidae and Nemesiid