Silk! After hearing about Eric's dragonfly and butterfly observations last night, I was scanning the San Francisco Chronicle headlines and noticed an unusual one -- something like "Baby spiders are falling from the sky..."
Young spiders drift on silk threads to disperse to new areas, and there were reports from the Bay Area of clumps of silk both in the sky and on the ground. I wondered if they were in Sonoma County, too, so while eating lunch today we kept an eye out and sure enough, we saw several clumps of silk crossing our view.
Then I went out to try to photograph a few for the record and these are the results. Often there was a larger, denser clump of silk at the end of a very narrow thread-like strand:
I was photographing these bundles of silk almost directly overhead and they were fairly high up, so I couldn't always see the entire streamer at the time. I was impressed to see how long some of them were when I started to review the photos. Look carefully to see how far the slender threads extend from the clump:
Hi, Jackie. How interesting!
ReplyDeleteI've forwarded this post to our friend Charles Griswold, a retired researcher at the Calif Academy of Sciences who specializes in spiders. If anyone would know the answer to your "why" question, he will.
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Charles-Griswold?fbclid=IwAR3r08z96r0uWvz0cpYYTCqPY9lnfZysCLEmYvNO740SyvHOKnEZu1jHSyg
I wonder if the dragonflies feed on the floating spiders?
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