Kurt Jones, CSU Extension, Chaffee County
Most
spiders are regarded as beneficial and should not be destroyed. Many people
fear spiders because of stories or myths about them. Others object to spiders
because of their habit of building webs in and around the home.
Spiders
differ from insects in that they have eight legs rather than six and only two
body regions instead of three. Some spiders spin a web while others do not.
Indoors,
many spiders may be found in basements, crawl spaces and other areas where it
is somewhat damp. Other spiders, however, prefer a drier situation and can be
found in the upper corners of rooms, in attics or in floor vents.
Life Cycle
After
mating, female spiders lay eggs in clusters called egg sacs. A few species lay
their eggs in dark hiding areas and not in a silken sac.
Some
female spiders guard their egg sacs; others carry the sacs with them. A female
may produce several egg sacs in
her life. Eggs usually hatch into small spiders within three weeks. Mating and egg laying can occur at any time
of the year, depending upon species.
Are Spiders Dangerous?
Two
species of spiders found in Colorado
can be harmful to humans if they are bit.
The black widow spider and the brown recluse spider have poisonous
bites. These two spiders are not aggressive and bites are uncommon. Their bites
are rarely fatal but can cause serious illness.
Medical attention should be sought in the case of bites from these
spiders.
Black Widow Spider
The
black widow spider, Latrodectus hesperus, is common throughout Colorado. This spider
can be found in undergrowth, under stones, in the openings to rodent burrows,
in hollow trees or in any other kind of protected area. Around the home it may
be found in garages, window wells, crawl spaces and occasionally in basements.
It likes undisturbed areas in and behind objects. Homes in new developments will be bothered
for some time from natural populations in the area.
The
female black widow is poisonous, while the male is not. The female is about 1
1/2 inches long. The body, excluding the legs, is about 1/2 inch, jet black or
dark brown, and usually has red markings that can take the shape of an
hourglass on the underside of the abdomen. The male is smaller with brown
markings. The two sexes may be easily distinguished by their sizes and by the
pattern of the red marks on the abdomen.
Brown Recluse Spider
The
brown recluse spider, Loxosceles reclusa, is rare in Colorado. There are a number of other
possible causes for symptoms similar to a bite from a brown recluse spider. In Colorado, these should
be considered more likely than a brown recluse bite, given its rarity in our
state. Specimens have been found and positively identified in the southeastern
portion of the state. Brown recluse spiders occasionally have been brought into
other parts of Colorado
with household effects being moved in from other states where this spider is
common. The brown recluse can live both indoors and outdoors, but in cooler
climates it prefers to live in houses. It usually is found in bathrooms,
bedrooms, closets, garages, basements and cellars.
The
brown recluse spider is about 1/2 inch long, usually tan or buckskin, with
long, dark brown legs and a violin-shaped dark mark immediately behind the
eyes. The base of the violin mark is on the head with the violin neck pointing
toward the abdomen. The brown recluse spider is the only spider with three
pairs of eyes; all others have four pairs. It produces little webbing since it
hunts its food.
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