OHA iii ix, 
THE GENESIS OF SNARES. 
Ir now remains to trace the relations which exist between the various 
forms of spinningwork treated in detail or alluded to in this volume. 
; In attempting this I am well aware that great difficulties lie 
Spinning- jn the path, and am not unmindful of the fact that one is in- 
work Re- |. : : : Biers 
eel clined in such a task to give greater or less play to imagination. 
Moreover, the limited knowledge of the spinning habits of our 
spider fauna hinders me from tracing the connecting links that would 
perhaps show intimate relations between industries which now seem widely 
separated. Nevertheless, one cannot well resist the effort. 
In considering the natural relationships of snares it is at least conven- 
ient to proceed from the standpoint of a gradual evolution or development 
of the spinning habit. In justice to my own belief, it is proper 
A Hypo- to state that such a course is entirely hypothetical. As far as I 
thetical jve been able to grasp the subject and reach conclusions there- 
Stand- ee J ae see 
point. from, there appears to be no ground, either in the habit of ex- 
isting fauna or in the records of geologic ages, to justify the as- 
sertion that any one tribe of spiders has been the parental stock out of 
which the others have proceeded, or that any one form of spinningwork 
has been the germinal form from which all the varied aranead industries 
have had a natural and gradual growth. 
Nevertheless, in that scientific use of the imagination which is a most 
advantageous and often a necessary factor in exhibiting the relations of 
things, it is proper for one to so far take advantage of current beliefs as 
to express certain relationships, which very clearly and beautifully ap- 
pear, as though they had originated through diverging or interblending 
lines from one common source. Doubtless many of my readers, certainly 
most of my scientific friends, will think that my tentative standpoint ex- 
presses the real state of things; and if the truth rests with them I shall 
be glad to thus help them make it appear. 
ie 
As the starting point of our first comparative view I take the Trapline. 
The simplest use of the thread or combination of threads thus denomi- 
nated may be seen in the habits of such a spider as Epeira strix. This 
aranead, like the majority of her congeners, forsakes her web during the 
(336) 
