20 Surprising Facts About Spiders That Will Amaze You

Surprising facts about spiders

Spiders often spark fear, but they’re among the most fascinating creatures on Earth. With thousands of species and unique adaptations, spiders play an essential role in balancing ecosystems. Let’s uncover 20 interesting and surprising facts about spiders that will change the way you look at them.

Why Spiders Are Important in Nature

Spiders may seem scary, but they’re actually natural pest controllers. They feed on mosquitoes, flies, and other insects that can harm crops or spread diseases. Without spiders, insect populations would explode, disrupting the natural balance.

Quick Facts About Spiders

Feature Information
Common NameSpider
Scientific NameAraneae
ClassArachnida
FamilyMany families (e.g., Araneidae, Theraphosidae, Lycosidae)
Average Life Span1–3 years (some tarantulas up to 30 years)
HabitatFound worldwide in forests, grasslands, deserts, caves, and homes
Distinctive Features8 legs, 2 body parts (cephalothorax & abdomen), most produce silk, many have venom

20 Surprising Facts About Spiders

1. Spiders are not insects

They belong to a different class called Arachnida, which also includes scorpions, ticks, and mites. Spiders have two main body segments and eight legs, while insects have three body segments and six legs.

2. Spider blood is blue

Unlike human blood, which uses iron to bind oxygen (giving it a red color), spider blood (called hemolymph) uses a copper-based molecule called hemocyanin, which gives it a pale blue or greenish-blue tint.

Did you know??

Male peacock spiders perform colorful dances, similar to peacocks spreading their feathers.

3. They move using hydraulics

Spiders do not have extensor muscles to push their legs outward. Instead, they pump fluid (hemolymph) into their legs to extend them, using a hydraulic system. This is why a dead spider’s legs often curl up.

A high-resolution, extreme macro close-up photograph of a jumping spider (likely Phidippus species) looking directly into the camera. The spider has a dark, fuzzy body with brown and tan hairs and large, reflective black eyes. Its powerful, thick front legs are prominent and covered in both light and dark hairs, resting on a smooth, pale brown surface.
spider legs- among surprising facts about spiders

4. A single spider can produce multiple types of silk

Some spiders can produce up to seven different types of silk from different glands, each with a specific use (e.g., sticky silk for the snare, strong silk for the frame, and soft silk for egg sacs).

5. A vegetarian spider

The Bagheera kiplingi jumping spider is the only known spider species with a mostly herbivorous diet, primarily eating protein-rich buds on acacia plants. All other known spider species are carnivores.

Did you know??

Jumping Spiders Have Excellent Vision. They can see in color and even recognize shapes. Their sharp vision helps them hunt with precision.

6. Spider silk is incredibly strong

A strand of spider silk is five times stronger than a piece of steel of the same diameter, making it one of the strongest materials in the world.

A high-contrast close-up photograph of a tan and brown orb-weaver spider with a distinct, patterned abdomen, resting in the center of its large, intricate, and silvery-white circular web. The background is a soft, blurry mix of dark green and blue, suggesting foliage and the sky, which makes the delicate web and the spider pop into sharp focus.

7. Spiders can “balloon.”

Young and small spiders often disperse by climbing to a high point, releasing silk into the air, and letting the wind carry them away, sometimes for miles. This is known as “ballooning.”

8. They digest food externally

Spiders cannot chew solid food. They inject digestive enzymes into their captured prey, which liquefies the internal tissues, and then they suck up the resulting liquid.

9. The world’s largest spider is the Goliath birdeater tarantula

It has a leg span that can reach up to 30 cm (12 inches) and can weigh over 170 grams (6 oz). Despite its name, it rarely eats birds. The Largest Spider Can Be the Size of a Dinner Plate.

A high-angle close-up photograph of a Goliath Birdeater tarantula (Theraphosa blondi), one of the world's largest spiders. The spider is large and covered in brown hair, resting on dark, damp ground. Its body is massive, and its legs are spread out. Green, heart-shaped leaves and other foliage frame the tarantula on the left and right sides of the image.
Goliath birdeater tarantula

10. Spiders can “taste” with their feet

Sensory hairs on a spider’s legs and pedipalps are so sensitive that they allow the spider to detect chemicals in the air and on surfaces. They can essentially “taste” a potential meal or a mate just by touching it.

11. Masters of color change

Certain ambush predators, like the Goldenrod Crab Spider (Misumena vatia), can actively change their body color from white to yellow and back again. This allows them to perfectly camouflage themselves while waiting on flowers to ambush pollinating insects.

12. The smallest known spider is tiny

The Patu digua spider measures just 0.37 millimeters, making it nearly invisible. Patu marplesi is so small that 10 of them could fit on the end of a pencil.

A macro close-up of a tiny, vibrantly colored spider resting on a human fingertip. The spider is exceptionally small, appearing no larger than a speck of glitter, and has an iridescent carapace with patches of green, red, and black. The smooth, light-pink skin of the finger and the cuticle provide a dramatic sense of scale against the minute arachnid.
A peacock spider on finger nail

13. Spiders can self-amputate their legs

Like lizards with their tails, spiders can perform autotomy (self-amputation). If a predator grabs one of their legs, they can deliberately detach it at a specific joint to escape and live to regenerate the limb if they are still young enough to molt.

14. Spiders Can Detect Vibrations Through Their Webs

Webs act like giant antennas, helping spiders sense movement instantly.

15. Spiders can “hear” you talking from across the room

Despite lacking eardrums, jumping spiders use the super-sensitive hairs on their legs to detect airborne vibrations. Studies have shown they can pick up low-frequency sounds, such as a deep voice or a clapping sound, from several meters away

16. They have “book lungs.”

Unlike human lungs, many spiders breathe using specialized structures called book lungs. These are stacks of thin, alternating air pockets and tissue filled with hemolymph (blood), resembling the pages of a book, which greatly increases the surface area for gas exchange.

17. Some spiders build “diving bells.

The incredible water spider (Argyroneta aquatica) lives its entire life underwater in slow-moving water. It weaves a dome-shaped web between aquatic plants and fills it with air carried down from the surface on its hairy abdomen, creating a “diving bell” to live and feed inside.

A dark-colored diving bell spider (Argyroneta aquatica) is captured in a close-up photo while residing inside its air-filled silk diving bell underwater. The bell, which looks like a large bubble, is attached to green aquatic plant matter. The spider is centered within the bubble, and its dark form is slightly obscured by the surrounding water and silk fibers.

18. Over 48,000 Spider Species

Scientists have discovered more than 48,000 species, and new ones are still being found every year

19. Spiders are found everywhere except Antarctica

They have adapted to live in nearly every type of habitat on Earth, from deserts to rainforests and even freshwater aquatic environments.

20. Male spiders often bring gifts to their mates

In some species, like the nursery web spider, the male presents the female with a wrapped-up insect (a “nuptial gift”) to distract her from eating him during mating.

FAQs

Q1: Do all spiders make webs?
No, many species hunt without webs.

Q2: Are all spiders poisonous?
Almost all have venom, but only a few are harmful to humans.

Q3: Can spiders be kept as pets?
Yes, tarantulas and jumping spiders are popular exotic pets.

Q4: How long do spiders live?
Most live 1–2 years, but some tarantulas survive up to 20 years.

Q5: Why do spiders scare people?
Arachnophobia is common and may come from evolutionary survival instincts.

Q6: Are spiders good for gardens?
Yes, they reduce harmful insect populations naturally.

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