190 



AMERICAN SPIDERS AND THEIR SPINNINGWORK. 



ascertain the exact location of the fly by pulling upon the radii. Having 

 satisfactorily decided this, she runs along the loosened radius and some- 

 times, when the prey is small or hopelessly entangled, contents 

 ,, PV, herself by pulling it up by means of the lines about it, and car- 

 ries it to her accustomed station, to be eaten at leisure. More 

 frequently she moves along the trapline, and almost entirely destroys the 

 triangular section which forms the web. This action is thus correctly de- 

 scribed by Professor Wilder : 



Before reaching the apex the spider cuts with her jaws the apex line, 

 but as she maintains her hold in front of the cut by her first and second 

 pairs of feet, and has a communication in the rear through the line which 

 most spiders always attach to a point behind them, she does not fall, 

 neither is the net loosened beyond a certain limit; it usually seems to 

 recoil about an inch ; this recoil tends to entangle the prey like 

 the original snap of the net. The spider again advances, gathers 



fcl 



er and cuts them all, still keeping the. line 



the radii togeth 

 drawn out be- 

 hind; again the 

 net recoils and 

 collapses. Again 

 she advances 

 and cuts the 

 radii; the net W FlG - 182 - condition of Hypti- 



vi otes' net when sprung upon a 

 IS nOW hardly If fly. (After Wilder.) 



distinguishable as such, and is falling together 



about the devoted fly ; the spider now spreads her 



legs, gathers the net between them and flings it like a 



blanket over her victim. Struggles are in vain ; but " to make 



assurance doubly sure" the spider grasps the mass, transfers it to 



her third pair of legs, and with them turns it over and over as 



a ball, hanging the while by her front legs ; and with the hinder 



pair, used alternately, draws out from the expanded spinnerets broad sheets 



of silk which, relatively to the power of the fly, are like steel bands upon 



a man. 



Having in this way reduced the prey to a rounded ball, in which its 

 limbs are hardly distinguishable, the spider takes it in her jaws and mounts 

 to her place. A single fly of ordinary size seems to occupy a whole day 

 in the eating. When finished, the remains are cast down as a pellet, so 

 perfectly deprived of moisture that it is probable that this species, like 

 Nephila and perhaps all Epei'ridic, sucks out the gum of its old net ;md 

 reelaborates it for use in making a new one. 1 



My observations of the feeding habits of Hyptiotes correspond with 

 those of Professor Wilder. She is very deliberate in her mode of proceed- 



1 Op. ('it., pHLTC <).">!. 



