Why Does Not A Spider Get Caught In Its Own Web?
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Spider Web |
Spiders build their webs to trap flies
and other insects for food. An insect is
unable to escape once it has become caught in the spider’s web. The more the insect struggles, the more it
becomes entangled in the sticky threads. A spider’s silk is strong enough that
most insects cannot break through it.
A web-spinning spider does not become
caught in its own web. When walking across
the web, it grasps the silk threads with special hooked claw on each foot. The spider also secretes an oily liquid onto
its legs and feet that prevent the sticky silk from sticking to its body. – Dick Rogers
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