Skip to content
thelocalreport.in thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

  • India News
  • World
  • Top Stories
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
thelocalreport.in
thelocalreport.in

Thelocalreport.in is a news website which includes national international,#sports,#wealth,#weather, #entertainment and other types of news.

Arachnid super-web reveals surprising ‘constant party’ life of mating spiders

KANIKA SINGH RATHORE, 14/11/202514/11/2025

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source

Sign up to our breaking news email for free real-time breaking news alerts delivered straight to your inbox

Sign up for our free breaking news emails

Sign up for our free breaking news emails

The world’s largest known spider web, believed to contain thousands of arachnids, has been discovered in a cave in Albanian-Greek Limit.

After researchers published their findings about two different spider species living peacefully in a huge colony nestled in a pitch-black, sulfur-rich cave, evolutionary biologist Lena Grinstead compared this “extremely rare” phenomenon to humans living in an apartment block.

“When I saw this study, I was very excited because…group living is really rare in spiders,” said Dr Grinstead, a senior lecturer at UK University of Portsmouthtold the Associated Press. “The fact that this huge colony of spiders lived in a place that no one had noticed before – I find extremely exciting.”

The results of the study, published last month in the journal Subterranean Biology, spread rapidly online due to striking images of the giant 1,140-square-foot spider web, a carpet-thick web stretched along the wall of a narrow passage inside the Sulfur Cave, which stretches from its entrance in Greece to Albania.

This arachnophobe’s worst nightmare was quickly dubbed “the world’s largest spider web.”

But the most amazing thing about the spider colony – which contains an estimated 110,000 spiders – has less to do with its size and more to do with what scientists found inside the giant cluster of funnel-shaped webs.

Two different species of spiders – about 69,000 Tegenaria domestica, or common house spiders, and 42,000 Prinerigone vagans – were living and thriving together. This behavior, which had never been seen before, stunned scientists because normally, the larger house spider would prey on its smaller neighbor.

“Often if you have spiders around, they will fight and eat each other,” said Dr. Grinstead, who was not part of the cave study but has researched spiders extensively. “We sometimes find that if food is abundant they become a little less aggressive.”

abundant food source

Scientist They are keen to understand how and why both species came to peacefully co-exist in a “permanently dark area” about 50 meters (164 ft) from the cave entrance, which is formed by the waters of the Sarandaporo River to form the Vromoner Valley.

Part of the answer, the research suggests, may lie in the combination of the estimated 2.4 million midge flies that buzz around the spider colony – an “unusually dense swarm” that provides a constant food source in an otherwise predator-scarce environment. Scientists also speculate that the spiders’ vision may be impaired due to the darkness of their friendly habitat.

However, Dr. Grinstead says it’s more likely that larger spiders evolved or became accustomed to responding to vibration signals when small flies land on their silken webs – and perhaps wouldn’t attack otherwise.

,spidersIn general, stuff isn’t particularly good to look at… and that includes these two species,” he said, adding that the two species “may cooperate to some extent in web building… but I think it’s highly unlikely that they cooperate in anything like capturing prey, caring for young, or caring for each other’s young.”

Dr. Grinstead draws parallels between spiders living together and how humans live together in apartment blocks.

“You are very happy to share the stairs, the lift,” she said. “But if someone comes into your living room and you haven’t invited them, you will be aggressive towards them.”

He said that while many spiders are “usually solitary, very aggressive” towards other creatures, once spiders develop the ability to live in groups, cohabitation of the two species is “relatively common”.

“But still, because these two species have never been found living together and have never been found living in groups, it makes it particularly exciting,” she said.

‘The net is dense – like a blanket’

Dr. Blerina Vrenozi, a biologist and zoologist at the University of Tirana in Albania who co-authored the paper, told the AP that this year’s expeditions helped understand “how this mystery was able to exist there.”

“The dna Interesting because they revealed that the species that lives inside the cave is different from the species that lives outside the cave.” He said, ”So it is the same species, but the DNA is different.”

The giant web of the cave colony was first observed in 2021 by a team of Czech speleologists led by Marek Audi. A year later, the Czech team expanded to include scientists from multiple universities, leading to the recently published scientific paper.

Audi said, “The web is dense; it’s like a blanket, and when there is any danger, the female crawls back and hides, and no creature of higher order can get her out of there.” “Cave spiders lay about a third as many eggs as spiders that live outside. Because it is certain that they will raise their offspring there… they can afford to lay fewer eggs.”

Audi said the cave, which is also home to colonies of large bats, also thrives on the abundance of midges inside the humid, dark space. “Both spiders and bats are constantly having a party out there,” he said.

appears to be the ideal environment

The study said the method used may “slightly overestimate” the total population of spiders in the colony, as some funnel webs may be abandoned or empty. However, other experts agree that the team’s exciting new research could provide broad evolutionary clues and is worthy of deeper study.

Dr. Sarah Goodacre, professor of evolutionary biology and genetics in the School of Life Sciences at the University of Nottingham, UK, says these types of research projects help pave the way for more studies that “may prove fundamental to our understanding of what forces shape the world around us – spidery or not.”

He said, “Natural selection will favor the ‘best’ strategies… the ‘winning strategy’, whatever that is.” “I guess the benefits of being part of this community far outweigh the costs.”

He said that if the dynamics changed in the seemingly ideal environment of abundant food and relative security, “freeloading would emerge and it would all be over.”

Hopefully the politics of co-existence will not prove complicated above ground. Audi said Albania has already asked which side the newly famous spiders are on.

“From a conservation standpoint, we did something interesting there and marked a boundary,” he said. “I just looked at it – and the spider web is on the Greek side.”

,

Stanislav Hodina in Prague; Florent Bajrami in Pristina, Kosovo, contributed to this report.

Uncategorised

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Follow Us On Google News

  • U.S. stocks slide as year-end trading tapers off
  • How HS2 still spent £37m of taxpayers’ money on homes even as routes were axed
  • Complete list of U.S. federal holidays for 2026 (including New Year’s Day)
  • Experts predict UK energy bills to fall by £138 in April
  • The most impactful deaths of 2025
  • FTSE 100 has best annual performance since 2009, outperforming Wall Street
  • Allied Pharmacies acquires 68 more branches of troubled Jhoots Pharmacy
  • Transfer News LIVE: City close Semenho, Salah update, latest Ghoschi news
  • Woman charged with murder after Christmas pensioner’s death
  • Sydney celebrates 2026 with fireworks after minute’s silence for Bondi victims
  • Iran appoints new central bank governor after mass protests, currency falls to record low
  • Netflix is ​​removing two of its most-replayed movies
  • Why some cities are embracing ‘quiet’ fireworks at New Year’s celebrations
  • Major changes to UK passports come into effect from today
  • Australian PM focuses New Year’s address on Bundy victims
  • UK investment falls to G7 lowest level
  • Two countries ban U.S. tourists from entering
  • Photos of New Year celebrations around the world
  • Los Angeles police try to identify toddler left behind by suspected car thief
  • Rodri will make his Manchester City return against Sunderland on New Year’s Day
  • How to complete the Martin Lewis-backed 1p Savings Challenge in 2026
  • New proposals to tackle indefinite prison sentences
  • Royal writer weighs in on ‘cover-up’ of Andrew documents
  • The Trump moments that define 2025, from AI videos to Oval Office clashes:
  • Rose Parade welcomes unwelcome New Year’s Day guests
  • Anthony Joshua’s poignant speech about ‘how fast life can go’ resurfaces after crash
  • Another European city will introduce tourism tax in 2026
  • Americans lose about $1,000 a year due to lack of financial literacy
  • Center will make strict law against fake seeds; Companies should compensate farmers: Chauhan
  • What we know about the latest search for flight MH370
  • Trump names everything after himself as his team defends renaming blitz
  • Authorities are investigating damage to undersea telecommunications cables in the Gulf of Finland
  • I stayed at an all inclusive resort in Corfu which was great for kids

Add thelocalreport.in As A Trusted Source in Google

Canada News

  • Police release photo of suspect in alleged 'unprovoked' attack at Vaughan Plaza
    Police release photo of suspect in alleged ‘unprovoked’ attack at Vaughan Plaza
  • 4 men, 2 women charged in drug and gun bust in York Region
    4 men, 2 women charged in drug and gun bust in York Region
  • Part of road closed due to water main break in Mississauga
    Part of road closed due to water main break in Mississauga
  • Scientists say 2025 was set to be one of the three hottest years on record
    Scientists say 2025 was set to be one of the three hottest years on record
  • Brampton man accused of stealing truck and crashing into police cruiser
    Brampton man accused of stealing truck and crashing into police cruiser
  • 1 in 3 Canadians planning to change jobs in 2026: study - CityNews Toronto
    1 in 3 Canadians planning to change jobs in 2026: study – CityNews Toronto

India News

  • Center will make strict law against fake seeds; Companies should compensate farmers: Chauhan
    Center will make strict law against fake seeds; Companies should compensate farmers: Chauhan
  • Congress leader Kharge criticizes BJP over 'loot, corruption and misgovernance' in 2025
    Congress leader Kharge criticizes BJP over ‘loot, corruption and misgovernance’ in 2025
  • Government extends ban on import of low ash metallurgical coke for 6 months
    Government extends ban on import of low ash metallurgical coke for 6 months
  • Tonk Police busted a huge explosive consignment, made arrests after receiving a tip-off.
    Tonk Police busted a huge explosive consignment, made arrests after receiving a tip-off.
  • 791 drone intrusions reported at IB in 2025: Defense Ministry
    791 drone intrusions reported at IB in 2025: Defense Ministry
  • Malhotra asks RBI staff to streamline rules and focus on being customer centric in the new year
    Malhotra asks RBI staff to streamline rules and focus on being customer centric in the new year

Us News

  • Comedian connects the dots on Erica Kirk
  • ब्रेकिंग: कांग्रेस के मौजूदा सदस्य ने संघीय कर विद्रोह का आह्वान किया!
  • The Trump White House is telling you that 2026 is going to be hot!
  • Tim Walz’s administration got caught in another big lie!
  • Documented: If You Have Cancer Read This Now!
  • “It’s time for a nationwide tax strike”

Uk News

  • U.S. stocks slide as year-end trading tapers off
    U.S. stocks slide as year-end trading tapers off
  • How HS2 still spent £37m of taxpayers' money on homes even as routes were axed
    How HS2 still spent £37m of taxpayers’ money on homes even as routes were axed
  • Complete list of U.S. federal holidays for 2026 (including New Year's Day)
    Complete list of U.S. federal holidays for 2026 (including New Year’s Day)
  • Experts predict UK energy bills to fall by £138 in April
    Experts predict UK energy bills to fall by £138 in April
  • The most impactful deaths of 2025
    The most impactful deaths of 2025
  • FTSE 100 has best annual performance since 2009, outperforming Wall Street
    FTSE 100 has best annual performance since 2009, outperforming Wall Street
  • India News
  • World
  • Top Stories
  • Uk
  • Canada
  • United States
©2025 thelocalreport.in | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes