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My house is
the hunting ground for
swarms of spiders. This photograph
of a family group was taken in the corner of the
bathroom ceiling. As an arachnaphobe, I am amazed that
I can live with them but it may be because these
particular spiders are not hairy and
do not scuttle, unlike the Tegenaria
house spiders, known locally as 'teggies', which
are evicted on sight.
These spiders
are Pholcus phalangoides, often known as
daddy-long-legs spiders. They hang in webs that are
mere untidy wisps of silk and so flimsy that they
appear incapable of catching anything. Yet I have
several times seen a Pholcus spider
quickly overcome a cranefly (the original daddy
long-legs) in a melee of
writhing, spindly limbs. The
spider's technique is to throw a mass of silk threads
over its victim before it can tear free from the web.
If any creature too large to handle lands in the web,
the
spider
throws itself into a frenzy
of gyrations, spinning in
circles like a demented
acrobat, in an attempt to throw the intruder out.
Gently prod a one of these spiders with a finger and
watch it whirl around.
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