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  2. Sexual selection in spiders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_selection_in_spiders

    A male Eresus sandaliatus. Sexual selection in spiders shows how sexual selection explains the evolution of phenotypic traits in spiders.Male spiders have many complex courtship rituals and have to avoid being eaten by the females, with the males of most species surviving only a few matings and consequently having short life-spans.

  3. Larinioides cornutus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larinioides_cornutus

    Like mating in many other spiders, the females create a silk cocoon for copulation. The females reside in the cocoon, and emit pheromones to lure males, who can sense them through chemoreceptors. The males insert sperm using their pedipalps, and fertilize the eggs of the female. These become yellow egg sacs. Like many other types of spiders ...

  4. The Hilarious Mating Ritual of the Peacock Spider - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/hilarious-mating-ritual...

    Social media also played a large role in the peacock spider’s rise to fame when a video of a male spider performing his ritual mating dance went viral. As of December 2024, we’ve now ...

  5. Hogna carolinensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogna_carolinensis

    Carolina wolf spiders mate in late summer. The females carry the eggs, the sacs attached to their abdomen, during the approximately two week incubation period. [7] There tends to be two main egg carrying seasons, the first in late July and the second in late August. [11] While incubating the eggs, female spiders are often seen "sunning" the egg ...

  6. Creepy, crawly and invasive. Are hand-sized Joro spiders in Ohio?

    www.aol.com/creepy-crawly-invasive-hand-sized...

    Joro spiders in the U.S. live primarily in Georgia, North Carolina and South Carolina. There haven't been any sightings of them in Ohio yet, according to a map from iNaturalist.org .

  7. Atypical tarantula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atypical_tarantula

    The two spiders mate and cohabit until the male dies, when the female eats him. The female makes an egg sac and hangs it in her burrow. The next summer, the eggs hatch, and the spring after that, the spiderlings leave their mother's burrow and wander off to find a suitable place to build a lair of their own. [1]

  8. Spiders, spiders everywhere? Tarantula mating season starts ...

    www.aol.com/news/spiders-spiders-everywhere...

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  9. Argiope (spider) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argiope_(spider)

    When it is time to mate, the male spins a companion web alongside the female's. After mating, the female lays her eggs, placing her egg sac into the web. The sac contains between 400 and 1400 eggs. These eggs hatch in autumn, but the spiderlings overwinter in the sac and emerge during the spring.