About This Book
A sustained natural-history account that records patient field observations of spiders, their webs, burrows, hunting strategies, venomous fangs, reproductive habits and life cycle. The author combines vivid anecdote and careful experiment to describe spinneret mechanics, architectural burrow construction, ambush and pursuit techniques, maternal care and the eventual desertion of nests. Interwoven are regional folk beliefs and medical lore about particularly feared species, with cautious reflection on how observation separates myth from fact. Emphasis falls on instinct, adaptive behavior and the spider’s industriousness as revealed through detailed, accessible explanatory prose.
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