Texas-size spider web


Entomologists are debating the origin and rarity of a giant sprawling spider web.


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Entomologists are debating the origin and rarity of a sprawling spider web that blankets several trees, shrubs and the ground along a 200-yard stretch of trail in a North Texas park.

“At first, it was so white it looked like fairyland,” said Donna Garde, superintendent of the park about 45 miles east of Dallas. “Now it’s filled with so many mosquitoes that it’s turned a little brown. There are times you can literally hear the screech of millions of mosquitoes caught in those webs.”

Spider experts say the web may have been constructed by social cobweb spiders, which work together, or could be the result of a mass dispersal in which the arachnids spin webs to spread out from one another.

Park rangers said they expect the web to last until fall, when the spiders will start dying off.

You can construct your own analogies.

Posted: Fri - August 31, 2007 at 10:36 AM