Deep beneath the Balkans, a massive sulfur-fed cave hosts 111,000 spiders in one shared web, defying typical spider behavior.
Sciencing on MSN
California's New Spider Species Lives At The Beach
A new spider was just found in the sands of Southern California, but scientists are already worried about the long-term ...
The world's largest spider web has been found in an underwater cave on the Greece-Albania border, according to a recent ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Giant cave web hosts 111,000 spiders from two species
In a remarkable display of nature’s wonders, scientists have unearthed the world’s largest spider web in a pitch-black cave ...
Learn more about how scientists uncovered an unlikely community of arachnids in Europe’s Sulfur Cave and why these spiders ...
AZ Animals US on MSN
A Half-Male, Half-Female Spider Was Just Discovered
Not only is this extraordinary spider an entirely new species previously unknown to science, but it is half male and half ...
Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
This Massive Web—Home to More Than 100,000 Spiders—Found in a Cave in Europe Could Be the World’s Largest
The cavern along the border of Greece and Albania is home to a terrifyingly high number of two species of arachnids that live ...
Scientists have discovered two new spiders with truly bizarre camouflage: not only do they look like bird poop, but they ...
While the Joro spider season, which spans from August to October, is over, these creepy crawlies can still pop up ...
Spider may elicit a “yuck” or an “ew” from many, but the true nature of these oft-feared critters is not as icky as one might ...
Scientists were stunned to find two different spider species peacefully cohabiting in massive 1,140-square-foot web.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results