Spider Web Transparent Image
Spiders start making their webs by pressing their hind legs on their abdomens, allowing the silky fluid to flow. After the flowing liquid sticks to any place, they start to weave their webs. The
spider web model that most of us are familiar with is the circular spiral one as below.
When spiders make this web, they first prepare the outer perimeter of their web and then weave the threads that extend from the outside to the inside. They then continue to weave, starting from the middle section and forming circular spirals. With this web, spiders can catch dozens of insects in one day.
Complex Web
Some spiders weave intricate webs, as in the figure below. As you can see, the network is complex and has no definite shape. The purpose of the spiders that make this web is to drop the insects in the middle of the web and get them tangled.
Wool Web
Another mesh model is a wool-like mesh model as follows. Woolen nets are special in content, not in shape. The sticky silk that makes up these networks consists of electrostatically charged silk nanofibers.
Layered Web
Another network model consists of layered networks as follows. These nets act like a deadly hammock; When an insect enters one of these threads, the spider emerges from its ambush and grabs its prey. This network is normally permanent and is regularly repaired.