Halloween is right around the corner, so it’s time for
another creepy crawly species of the month. We’ve covered bats and owls, so
this year we’ll go to the spiders. Stop reading here if they creep you and come
back next week. Grass spiders are a genus of several funnel weaving spiders,
including the Pennsylvania grass spider. You’ll likely start noticing these
robust spiders in your house as they venture inside to avoid the falling
outdoor temperatures. We associate spiders with Halloween because they are at
their biggest after growing all year.
Pennsylvania grass spider at my sister's house |
Scientific name: Agelenopsis species
Kingdom: Animalia (animals)
Class: Arachnida (arachnids)
Order: Araneae (spiders)
Range: All of North America except Arctic areas
Habitat: Lawns, your house during fall
Grass spider in its natural habitat (Penn State) |
Diet: Insects
Predators: Birds
Conservation Status: No special protection
Grass spider in its web (Missouri Department of Conservation) |
Other Information: Grass spiders build funnel or
tunnel shaped webs in the grass, hence the name. Females lay eggs in sacs during
late summer or early fall, with eggs hatching in spring. The eggs survive over
the winter but adult spiders do not. Grass spiders are fast and typically avoid
humans, but will occasionally bite with trapped and threatened. Information
this week comes from Insect Identification, despite spiders not being an insect.
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