Life cycle of a Garden Spider
The
Black and Yellow Argiope or Argiope Aurantia, also known informally as
the Garden Spider, is one of many species of Orb-web spider. Orb-web
spiders build circular webs which serve as a full-time residence during
their single-year lifespan. The spider is common to the lower 48
states, southern Canada, Mexico, and Central America.
The yellow
garden spider is a species of spider common to the lower 48 states,
southern Canada, Mexico, and Central America. They have distinctive
yellow and black markings on their abdomens and a mostly white
cephalothorax.
The female of the species grows much larger
than the male. Females can reach one and a half inches (excluding legs)
and have large rounded bodies, while males are slim and 3/8 to 3/4”
long. Legs of both male and female are yellow and vivid black with
banding in various colors. Adding legs, the female can reach an
impressive 3” in diameter but not all adult females become that large
and some can be rather small and difficult to locate.
The
spider’s striking yellow and black markings make identification easy,
but despite this coloration, the Garden Spider blends perfectly into
partially sunlit areas. At first encounter they look menacing, but are
harmless to humans and easy to observe because they stay in one area
the entire summer. Normally if you find one spider, others will be in
the vicinity nearby.
The circular or orb part of the female web
can be two feet in diameter and webs are built at elevations from one
to eight feet off the ground but not high in trees. The male’s small
web can be found close to the female.
Garden Spiders build webs
in areas adjacent to open sunny fields where they stay concealed and
protected from the wind. The spider can also be found along the eves of
houses and outbuildings or any tall vegetation where a web can be
securely attached. Information signs in parks are good places to find
these spiders if the sign is tucked half-hidden in brush that adjoins
an open field or marsh.
The Garden Spider niche places them on
the edge of open spaces where a rich variety of flying insects
congregate. This includes the edges of yards and gardens, and is
probably the original source for their name.
A hiker rummaging
through the brush on the edge of a field or a child retrieving a ball
from behind bushes can sometimes enjoy an exciting face-to-face
encounter. The spider doesn’t attack and if one walks through a web,
the spider will exit down the arm while the person flails around
screaming. The spider is quite fragile and easily killed by the
slightest blow. Once immersed in one of these webs, the best course is
merely back away. The web will stay partially intact and the spider
will rebuild the following day.
The web consists of several
radial lines stretched among 4 or 5 anchor points that can reach six or
more feet apart. The web lines are attached to firm stationary objects
like a building, pole, tree or bush. The radial lines meet at a central
point, and to this basic struucture the spider adds a framework with
more radial lines. The web is finished with circles of silk spaced
3/16" to 3/8" between successive rings depending on the size of the
spider. Webs contain innumerable irregularities with various degrees of
pitch and no two are exactly alike. However most Garden Spiders seem to
angle their web at 75°-80° and will stay on the most inverted side. The
female's web is substantially larger than the male who builds a smaller
zig-zag web nearby.
The male does not occupy the
female's web, and when he finally enters the web to mate in late July
or early August, he remains for a few days but stays well back from the
big female. He appears to wait on the edge for an opportune moment or
invitation. The female will eat the male and anything else that enters
the web.
When disturbed, the spider oscillates her web
vigorously back and forth while she remains firmly attached in the
center. This action might prevent predators like wasps and birds from
drawing a good bead on their prey. This action is also used to catch
insects that flutter too near the web, and also to fully entangle an
insect before it can cut itself loose. The spider is able to stop the
oscillations quickly, which indicates it has a masterful grip on its
environment.
Only when directly perturbed (like passing the
shadow of your hand over its web or poking the spider with a pencil)
does the spider abandon its center position and run to the edge of the
web, otherwise the spider waits inverted in the web, with head facing
downward for its entire one-summer lifespan. The spider does leave its
web when it changes locations at night and also when it leaves one
night in late summer to lay eggs.
As a footnote, the spider
becomes accustomed to passing shadows caused by your hand once the
stimulus is repeated several days in a row. Progressively the spider
responds less and less until it barely reacts after four consecutive
days. However if the stimulus is stopped for a length of time, and then
repeated later, the spider will again respond, but won’t run as far,
and stops responding more quickly than the first time the sequence was
performed. Not every spider responds to this stimulus either.
These
observations indicate that Garden Spiders can differentiate threats and
decide which to ignore. It also shows they are quite aware of their
surroundings and can learn from experience. The reaction to shadows is
most likely a defensive strategy against incoming birds and animals.
Some
spiders also responds to shadows at nighttime, which probably means
bats or other night hunters, perhaps snakes, will target the spider.
Evidence of nocturnal predation is bolstered since some mornings a web
can be observed torn apart in the middle and the spider is missing. It
appears whatever took the spider struck quickly and was aiming for the
center of the web. Most adult spiders however make it through the full
season.
In a daily ritual, the spider consumes the circular
interior part of the web and then rebuilds it each morning with fresh
new silk. The spider may be recycling the chemicals used in web
building. Additionally, the fine threads being consumed appear to have
particles of what may be miniscule insects and organic matter stuck to
the web that could contain nutrition.
The full radial
framework and anchoring lines are not replaced daily unless the spider
changes location. The spider uses its legs in the rebuilding process
and bends the radial lines slightly together while applying silk so the
new web is stretched taut. Even a spider missing three legs on one side
of its body can rebuild a web. The spider starts with the innermost
ring and moves successively outward in a clockwise motion, but every
spider is different. Watching the spider rebuild is like watching a
geometric ballet, but you have to get up at first sun to see the entire
process.
After rebuilding the web, the spider makes a
dense zig-zag pattern in the center to conceal her presence, and then
remains motionless throughout the heat or rain until a moth, wasp,
dragonfly or other insect is snared. The spider prepares the catch and
later removes it to the center of the web to be consumed with a
soda-straw appendage in the spider’s mouth. After depleting the
nutrients, the carcass is dropped to the ground where it successively
feeds smaller forms of life.
Normally the spider stays on the
same side of the web throughout the season, however if aggravated
enough by the observer it will reverse sides. Minor aggravation doesn’t
seem to cause location change, but if the web is repeatedly knocked
down, the spider will move, although usually not very far away. Spiders
learn quickly not to rebuild where passing people dislodge their anchor
lines.
Once a spider has found a location that it likes, it
will rebuild its web over and over in that spot for the rest of the
summer. Some spiders continually change locations throughout the
season, perhaps looking for better protection or better hunting.
Interestingly, when they relocate, they don’t go far but they remove
the entire web from its previous location.
Perhaps removal of
the web is to conceal whereabouts from prey and active predators, but
they leave a line of silk that indicates the direction they’ve gone.
Since they intentionally remove all the radial lines of the web before
changing locations, it shows they understand the complicated sequence
of movements needed to accomplish the work. This shows that Garden
Spiders are not genetic automatons, but instead carry out very complex
behaviors.
Female webs can exist close to each other, and
sometimes they can be seen in pairs, but usually they stay apart from
each other, and the webs are usually not connected with each other.
However these spiders are extremely variable, and every summer seems to
bring new surprises. The Garden Spider doesn't live in dense web
clusters like other similar-in-appearance orb spiders such as the
Golden Orb Web Spider, also called Banana Spiders.
There are a
lot of similarities and differences in the two types of spiders. They
both reach the same size and have similar webs and similar body
structures although their color-markings are dissimilar. The Garden
uses a white silk and the Banana uses a golden silk. The Garden Spider
keeps a clean orderly web in comparison to the cluttered series of webs
built and abandoned by groups of Banana Spiders. The Garden Spider
makes a zig-zag pattern of silk in the center of the web to conceal its
presence, while the Banana has no disguise and remains openly visible.
The web differences illustrate nature’s diverse approach to the basic
business of trapping insects.
Both species build their orb
webs near open sunny areas, but the Garden Spider doesn’t build high in
trees. Both species oscillate their webs to ensnare insects. Females in
both species remain inverted in the center of the web; Females are
larger than the males; and both species of females eat the smaller
male. However Banana males occupy the female web and are always near at
hand while Garden Spider males have a separate web nearby and
apparently only enter the female web at mating time. Interestingly,
sometimes both spider species can be seen within feet of one another.
Near
the end of the season, usually in September, the female Garden Spider
begins to neglect the web. The web is not as big or as completely
rebuilt as earlier in the summer. At the same time the spider's abdomen
grows large and round. This signals the beginning of egg-laying which
takes place in late August or early September.
The female spider
lays eggs at nighttime near the web, and covers the eggs with a
beige-colored sac suspended away from the surface using a thick mesh of
silk. The thick silk barrier protects the eggs, and also makes the sac
very difficult to sweep away. Egg sacs can remain hanging in position
for a couple years after the babies leave. The sacs slowly deteriorate
perhaps from fungus or bacteria but nothing seems to get near them,
implying that they have limited nutritional value or they contain the
spider’s venom.
Egg sacs range from 5/8" to 1" in diameter and
look like miniature hot-air balloons with a gathered opening at the
top. Each spider produces from one to as many as four sacs with perhaps
over a thousand eggs inside each. A spider that produces multiple sac
will cluster them in a group sometimes just inches apart.
In the
days following egg-laying, the female is thinner and begins to moves
sluggishly. She also starts to lose her bright yellow color. The web
falls into further neglect, and as the evenings cool, the female
disappears from the web overnight and dies. The baby spiders hatch in
the fall, but remain inside the sac until the following spring.
In
the spring, the young spiders exit the sac and are so tiny that their
collection of bodies look like dust gathered inside the silk mesh. You
have to look very close to see the little specs of brown dust are
actually tiny moving spiders. At this stage they seem indistinguishable
from many other species of baby spider. The new generation usually
rebuilds webs close to where the eggs were laid, but never exactly
where a web was built the year before. The same general area usually
has a returning population of Garden Spiders that makes them easy to
observe from year to year.
Adolescence:
Out of the many
egg sacs and thousands of eggs laid, only two to four adult female
spiders will reappear and make webs in the same vicinity. This leads to
speculation that most young spiders don't survive or become large
enough to make full-sized webs.
The transition from egg sac to
full-sized spider is a mystery. Full-sized spiders seem to appear
overnight, complete with a full-sized web when they weren't there the
day before.
Large numbers of growing adolescent spiders with
small webs are not observed. This may indicate that their adolescence
is spent living in tiny webs that remain well hidden. In any case, the
Garden Spider seems to have a growth process that leads to sudden
enlargement as they emerge into adulthood and build full-sized adult
webs. This might depend on the spider’s ability to catch good
nourishment at just the right point in their life-cycle.
This
developmental period might seem dull compared to watching full-grown
spiders; however the six-weeką adolescent stage represents a large
percentage of lifetime for an organism whose entire life-cycle
encompasses less than a year.
Since most of the spider’s life
is spent as a dust-sized speck closely packed together with others of
it kind in the egg sac, it would be fascinating to understand their
social structure. It’s unknown what they do during the winter-stay in
the protective sac, but it must affect which spiders reach
maturity.
The returning number of adults remains
unchanged from year to year, and this raises question whether the tiny
newborns leave the egg-sac and make a dash for survival, or if the
species utilizes a cannibalistic strategy where the nutrients harvested
by the colony of growing spiders end up feeding two or three strong
females that make it to adulthood. The question could be answered by
tediously tracking the near-invisible babies or by carefully observing
areas where adult spiders are likely to emerge and build webs.
It’s
also a mystery how such tiny creatures can travel hundreds of yards
from where eggs sacs were seen, or how they get to areas they were not
observed in before. In a natural irony, do the baby spiders hitch rides
on the legs of flying insects that they later eat? Or do they travel by
silk threads that sometimes can be seen floating across open areas.
Spiders
are everywhere and so is the silk they use. Catching sunlight coming
across a low-cut field shortly before sunset, one can see silk running
from nearly every stalk of plant to the next in an endless array of
pathways. Also looking at the same light coming through panes of window
glass shows the entire surface is streaked with strands of silk. It
appears the world is covered with web material, but how the Garden
Spider travels and communicates through this maze is unknown.
Many
mysteries remain since much of the Garden Spider’s activity seems to
take place at night, plus they remain well-hidden as adolescents.
Evidence for night-activity comes from observations that they lay eggs
at night and also change locations at night. Additionally, when they
finally emerge as full-grown adults, they appear overnight, complete
with a full-sized web, ready for business that morning.
The Garden Spider’s life-cycle epitomizes the raw complexity of nature.
Gene Haynes