enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Sericulture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sericulture

    Sericulture, or silk farming, is the cultivation of silkworms to produce silk. Although there are several commercial species of silkworms, the caterpillar of the domestic silkmoth is the most widely used and intensively studied silkworm.

  3. List of animals that produce silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_animals_that...

    Spiders make spider silk for various purposes such as weaving their webs, protecting their eggs or as a safety line. The amphipod Peramphithoe femorata uses silk to make a nest out of kelp blades. Another amphipod, Crassicorophium bonellii, use silk to build shelter. Carp produce fibroin units, a component of silk, to attach their eggs to rocks ...

  4. Spider silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_silk

    Spider silk is a protein fibre or silk spun by spiders. Spiders use silk to make webs or other structures that function as adhesive traps to catch prey, to entangle and restrain prey before biting, to transmit tactile information, or as nests or cocoons to protect their offspring.

  5. Silkhenge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silkhenge

    Silkhenge structures are a means of spider reproduction used by one or more currently-unknown species of spider. It typically consists of a central " spire " constructed of spider silk , containing one to two eggs, surrounded by a sort of fence of silk in a circle.

  6. Wild silk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wild_silk

    Silk taken from various species has been used since ancient times, either in its natural state or after some form of preparation. Spider webs were used as a wound dressing in ancient Greece and Rome, [2] and as a base for painting from the 16th century. [3] Caterpillar nests were used to make containers and fabric in the Aztec Empire. [1] [4]

  7. Pisaurina mira - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pisaurina_mira

    Pisaurina mira, also known as the American nursery web spider, due to the web it raises young in, is a species of spider in the family Pisauridae. They are often mistaken for wolf spiders due to their physical resemblance. P. mira is distinguished by its unique eye arrangement of two rows.

  8. Orb-weaver spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orb-weaver_spider

    Generally, orb-weaving spiders are three-clawed builders of flat webs with sticky spiral capture silk. The building of a web is an engineering feat, begun when the spider floats a line on the wind to another surface. The spider secures the line and then drops another line from the center, making a "Y".

  9. Spinneret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spinneret

    A spinneret is a silk-spinning organ of a spider or the larva of an insect. Some adult insects also have spinnerets, such as those borne on the forelegs of Embioptera. [1] Spinnerets are usually on the underside of a spider's opisthosoma, and are typically segmented. [2] [3] While most spiders have six spinnerets, some have two, four, or eight. [4]