186 AMERICAN SPIDERS AND THEIR SPINNINGWORK. 



construction, and the amount of care which the mother gives it? Tliere 

 is much difference in the extent of elaboration of cocoons. Tlie simplest 

 construction of which I have any knowledge is that of our com- 

 Complex- j^-^Qj-^ cellar spider, Pholcus phalangioides, which surrounds its 

 1 yan little cluster of agglutinated eggs with the barest filament of 

 Care *^^^ through which the eggs are entirely visible. This rude co- 



coon the mother holds underneath her jaws, and there carries it 

 imtil the spiderlings are ready to hatch out, when they take their j^lace 

 upon the straggling lines at the top of the maternal snare. Steatoda bore- 

 alis spins a cocoon scarcely more elaborate than the above ; she hangs it 

 within her snare of crossed lines and stays near it. The cocoons of Lycosa 

 and Dolomedes are also carried about by the mothers until they are hatched 

 or nearly ready to hatch. These cocoons are rather simple in structure, 

 consisting of a patch of spinningwork rolled up into a ball, without any 

 internal padding or protection whatever. The cocoons of many Tube- 

 weavers, the Drassids, for example, and the cocoons of Laterigrade spiders 

 are simple parchment like textures, spun against a surface, and are also 

 free from any internal padding or external protection. 



These spiders are in the habit of watching their cocoons, remaining 

 near them until the little ones are hatched. Thus far it might be said 

 that there is some reason for the conclusion that lack of complexity in 

 the structure of a cocoon is supplemented by additional vigilance on the 

 part of the mother in watching the cocoon. 



Let us see how it is among Orbweavers. The most complex cocoons 

 are found among these spiders. That of Argiope, for example, 

 mong exhibits remarkable regard for the protection of eggs and young, 

 weavers ^^ ^^^ tough external case, its tliick lined padding of brown silk, 

 which nearly surrounds the egg mass, and the sac whicli con- 

 tains it. Argiope, as far as known, never watches her cocoon. 



The same is true of most species of the genus Ejieira, whose cocoons 

 are frequently enclosed within a tent of sheeted si^inningwork or of closely 

 laid lines, and are themselves composed of several layers of spinningwork 

 of various textures. Most spiders of this genus give their cocoons no care 

 after they have made them. There are, however, exceptions. Epeira cine- 

 rea, for example, not only encloses her eggs in a well furnished cocoon, 

 but adds to it scrapings from the bark of trees or the dry wood surface 

 upon which the cocoon may be fastened. Yet, according to Mrs. Mary 

 Treat, this spider is extremely watchful of its cocoon. 



Cyclosa caudata provides the ordinary enswathment for lier eggs, and 



adds to that an exterior armor of the disjecta membra of in- 



ocoon ggQ^g captured by her. Yet these cocoons are hung within her 



snare, and during the cocooning season she is found constantly 



clinging to the end of her cocoon string. However, that this contiguity is 



an actual vigil is not proved. 



