« What about this Bush plan? | Main | David Brooks is funny »

Oh, what a tangled web

31 Aug 2007 11:19 am

I am totally terrified of spiders, along with almost anything else that has more than four legs. (Grasshoppers are okay). Past boyfriends will attest that you don't really know fear until you hear the electrifying strangled screams that emit from my mouth at the sight of, say, a largish cockroach. Naturally, therefore, I was unable to resist clicking on a New York Times headline that read "Got Arachnophobia? Here’s Your Worst Nightmare"

Actually, however, the story turned out to be pretty cool:

Most spiders are solitary creatures. So the discovery of a vast web crawling with millions of spiders that is spreading across several acres of a North Texas park is causing a stir among scientists, and park visitors.

Sheets of web have encased several mature oak trees and are thick enough in places to block out the sun along a nature trail at Lake Tawakoni State Park, near this town about 50 miles east of Dallas.

. . .

Allen Dean, a spider expert at Texas A&M University, has seen a lot of webs, but even he described this one as “rather spooky, kind of like Halloween.”

Mr. Dean and several other scientists said they had never seen a web of this size outside of the tropics, where the relatively few species of “social” spiders that build communal webs are most active.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://meganmcardle.theatlantic.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/16116

Comments (4)

gee, you should get together with Archives Megan and talk critters and try not squick each other out... she particularly hates potato bugs... [jeruselem cricket not rolly poly]... Mentoring and Spiders

I particularly hate the large web areas, because there are broods in them thar webs... and that's just much more than even I can take...

well see now grasshoppers are only a problem when they attack as a swarm...
hoards

I wonder if this will turn out to be one of those rare instances where a genetic mutation has resulted in a new species? Quite interesting.

Post a comment

By using this service you agree not to post material that is obscene, harassing, defamatory, or otherwise objectionable. Although The Atlantic does not monitor comments posted to this site (and has no obligation to), it reserves the right to delete, edit, or move any material that it deems to be in violation of this rule.


Copyright © 2007 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. All rights reserved.