304 



AMERICAN SPIDERS AND THEIR SPINNINGWORK. 



snare hung among the foliage underneath. One would certainly think 

 that a spider thus domiciled has secured for herself the highest attainable 

 security and comfort within the compass of aranead nidification. At other 

 times her den will be found within the point of a single leaf, which has 

 been curled over and sewed together. 



It will thus be seen that the nesting habit of Thaddeus is closely re- 

 lated to that of the group represented by Insularis and Trifoliuni, the 

 principal difference being, that in the last named species the silken i)art 

 of the structure seems to be rather the lining, while in the former the 

 silken tent is quite distinct and the leaf shelter appears to be rather a 

 secondary matter. At all events, no matter how complete may be the 



security afforded by the clustered leaves 

 or rolled leaves, the cylindrical tent of 

 Thaddeus may nearly always be found 

 entire, and in a well secured retreat. 



In the case of Triaranea the use of 

 the leaf in nidification is extremely 



rare. Such, at least, is the 



Nest of u X' 1 



„ . result of my own observa- 



Triaranea . , t . i i 



tions, altliough 1 should not 



be at all surprised to find that in 

 other geographical provinces the spider 

 may be found to resort to the aid of 

 leaves and other material quite as free- 

 ly as some of her cogeners. Neverthe- 

 less, it is probable that the maze of 

 netted lines within which she swings 

 her bell sliaped tent answers all the 

 purposes of a leafy protection, and 



Fig. 280. Nest of Epeira thaddeus within leaves. 

 The tube is shown uncovered at the upper right ;xS loUg aS her homC is protected by 

 hand of the cut. , . , .ii i , 



such an envn-onment she will be less 

 likely to resort to the additional protection of leaves. 



Be that as it may, her home is a silken dome, swung within a mass of 

 netted lines supported upon the foliage of trees, or stayed upon the sur- 

 rounding surfaces of her nest site. It is ojaen downward toward the orb, 

 to which the home is connected by the ordinary trapline. The mass ex- 

 tends well below the mouth of the tent, and a little free space is usually 

 left between the maze and the orb. Sometimes the tent is decidedly bell 

 shaped, widest at the mouth, and is much larger than the occupant herself, 

 as at Fig. 282. Again, I have seen a tubular passage way or vestibule ex- 

 tending from the mouth of the nest entirely through tlie length of the 

 maze, thus affording a sheltered passage for the spider along her trapline, 

 well nigh to the point of approach to the orb at its hub. (See Chapter 

 VIII., Figs. 123, 132.) It often happens that Triaranea selects a site that 



