<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">AGELENA</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> going farther afield, let us investigate
one of the spinners of the sheet-webs that are so
unpleasantly familiar in the house. We object to
them on very obvious grounds, first as evidence
of neglect and bad housewifery, and secondly as
repulsive objects when covered by accumulations
of dust which their firm texture and their durability
make inevitable.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The common house-spiders belong to the family
Agelenidae. It is quite likely that their original
home was in a warmer climate where they lived out
of doors, but that was long ago, and now they
uniformly select buildings of some sort for their
operations. They have, however, even in this country,
several open-air cousins, and most people know the
great sheet-web spider of the hedge-rows, though its
name—<i>Agelena labyrinthica</i>—may be new to them.
Its web consists of a closely woven wide-spreading
sheet connected with a tube of even denser material,
in the mouth of which the spider may generally be
seen lurking, a rather sinister object. If a better
view of the animal is desired it is only necessary to
agitate the web slightly and the spider runs forward
to investigate. It is a large species as British spiders
go—about three quarters of an inch in length—with
the abdomen rather prettily marked with oblique
white streaks.</p>
<p>It is very unlike our garden spider in certain
points of structure; its body is more elongate and
rather rigid, with little play of action between the
cephalothorax and the abdomen; its legs are notably
long, and so are two of its spinnerets, which can be
seen protruding beyond the abdomen as we look
down upon it.</p>
<p>But we shall gain little information by looking
at the completed web, and our best plan is to take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span>
the animal home and observe it in captivity. We
have prepared for its reception a box about a foot
square, with a gauze top and a movable glass front.</p>
<p>It is not such an easy matter to secure the spider,
which can run like a lamp-lighter, and which has a
way of escape at the lower end of its tube. The
safest way is suddenly to shut off this means of
retreat with the finger and thumb of the left hand
and simultaneously to present a glass phial at the
mouth of the tube; the spider runs up into it and is
taken without the risk of injury. It is never
advisable to handle spiders, not because any British
species is formidable, but because they so readily
part with their limbs in order to escape, and the
chances are that only a mutilated specimen will be
obtained.</p>
<p>Now <i>Agelena</i> does not seem to be a particularly
engaging pet, but it has its points. In the first
place, it very quickly makes itself at home; a short
time is spent in exploring its new quarters, but it
adapts itself almost at once to its changed situation.
Moreover it is of a peaceable and domestic disposition
and the male and female live amicably together,
which is far from being the case among the Epeiridae,
whose peculiar marital relations are often—quite
wrongly—attributed to the whole tribe of spiders. A
male garden-spider courts the female at the risk of
his life, and it is not surprising that he should evince<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span>
great hesitation and caution in his advances. If his
attentions are unwelcome, or even if they have been
accepted, he will be promptly trussed up and eaten
unless he beats a hasty retreat. But with <i>Agelena</i>
the conjugal relations are exemplary, and harmony
reigns in the home. The question of food is certainly
a difficulty, but if insects are let loose in the cage
the spider will attend to the catching of them. In
some cases raw meat has been found a satisfactory
substitute.</p>
<p>After a brief exploration of the box the captive
soon becomes busy, going to and fro across its cage
and attaching lines to the sides at some height up
from the floor. So fine is the work that for a long
time hardly anything is visible, and the movements
of the animal are the only clue to what is taking
place. By and by it becomes evident that a sort of
skeleton platform has been spun across the box,
upon which the spider is able to walk. It is
continually strengthened by new threads, and braced
by stay-lines above and below. It has been hardly
possible to follow the operations by which this has
come about, and even now we are chiefly aware of
the existence of the platform because we see the
spider walking upon it; its movements seemed very
scrambling and unmethodical, but they have resulted
in the foundation of the sheet-web and its terminal
tube. But now it begins to behave quite differently,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span>
and another phase of the work has clearly begun; it
crawls about over the almost invisible foundation
lines with a most curious gait, using its long legs to
sway its body from side to side, raising and depressing
its abdomen at intervals, and as this motion continues
a beautiful gauzy sheet of incredibly fine texture
gradually grows into view. What is happening is
that the spider is strewing over the foundation
lines multitudinous threads from its long posterior
spinnerets, which are beset on their under surface
with numbers of hair-like spinning tubes from each
of which the silk is issuing. All day long the process
goes on, and by slow degrees the web increases in
density. Indeed for days after the structure is
complete the spider spends odd moments in going
over the ground again till the sheet, and especially
the tube proceeding from it to a corner of the box,
are so closely woven as to have become almost
opaque, and its occupant at length appears to be
satisfied with his handiwork, and retires into the
tube to wait patiently for casual visitors.</p>
<p>July is a good month in which to experiment with
<i>Agelena</i>, for if the captives include female specimens
some further spinning operations of a very complicated
description may be observed. The time of egg-laying
is at hand and elaborate preparations have to be
made, but if the experimenter wishes to see the
whole process he must be prepared to sacrifice his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span>
night’s rest, for the most critical part of the
performance takes place in the small hours of the
morning. We will describe what occurred in the
case of one <i>Agelena</i>.</p>
<p>The approaching oviposition was heralded several
hours beforehand by the animal commencing to
weave a hammock-like compartment from the roof
of the box and above the sheet-web. This chamber
was about four inches long and was constructed
precisely in the same manner as the sheet, to which
it was braced by lines from various points of its
under surface. Its construction occupied the whole
day previous to the laying of the eggs, and not until
half an hour before midnight was it completed.
Within this compartment, close to the roof, the
spider next wove a small sheet one inch long, working
diligently in an inverted position, ventral surface
upwards. After a quarter of an hour it rested for
an equal space, apparently exhausted by its prolonged
efforts. An hour and three quarters intermittent
work served to complete the sheet, the spider varying
the monotony of its sinuous walk round this small
area by occasionally walking over it and strengthening
the lines which attached its angles to the roof.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><SPAN name="f5" id="f5" /> <ANTIMG src="images/i_055.jpg" width-obs="500" height-obs="426" alt="Fig. 5. Agelena weaving her egg-cocoon." /> <p class="caption">Fig. 5. <i>Agelena</i> weaving her egg-cocoon.</p> </div>
<p>A marked change now became observable in the
manner of working. The animal abandoned its incessant
to and fro motion but began to jerk its body
up towards the sheet, throwing silk strongly against<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span>
it. At the same time the posterior spinnerets were
actively rubbed together and the long posterior
spinnerets separated and brought together again with
a scissor-like action. The result of this performance
was to invest the under surface of the small sheet
with a coating of flossy silk quite unlike the ordinary
web in texture, the purpose of which soon became
evident, for at about a quarter past two the spider
began to deposit its eggs <i>upwards</i>, against this loose-textured
silk, aiding the egg-mass to adhere by<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>
occasional upward jerks of the body. This occupied
between five and ten minutes, and as soon as it was
accomplished the under surface of the egg-mass was
covered by a layer of flossy silk similar to that against
which it was laid, the eggs being thus entirely enveloped
in a coating of soft loose-textured material.
This was next covered in by a sheet of firm texture
like that of the original web.</p>
<p>It might be supposed that the work was at length
finished and that a well-earned rest might be enjoyed,
but this was far from being the case. The
spider remained as active as ever though an hour or
two passed before the object of its industry was
evident. All this time it was incessantly climbing
backwards and forwards between the egg-sheet and
the hammock and generally scrimmaging round in
the most unaccountable way, but it gradually became
evident that the eggs were being enclosed in a
wonderful transparent box of filmy silk with the egg-bearing
sheet for its roof. By nine o’clock it was of
moderate strength and opacity, and the spider, having
worked “the clock round,” no longer laboured continuously.
Days elapsed, however, before it was
entirely finished to the satisfaction of the spider, which
remained all the time in close proximity to the box
and could with difficulty be frightened away, but
clung tenaciously to it when interfered with.</p>
<p>Now this remarkable performance, which any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span>
reader endowed with sufficient patience may observe
for himself, gives food for thought. The spider has
never seen a cocoon constructed and has no model
to work by, and yet it performs with absolute precision
all the stages, in their proper succession, of
a work which involves quite a number of different
spinning operations, nor does the absence of light by
which to work trouble it in the slightest. It seems
hard to believe that this is not a sign of high intelligence
and that the spider is probably quite
unconscious of the object for which it has laboured
so long and so aptly. But how otherwise explain
this curious fact? If the eggs are removed the
moment they are laid the work is continued precisely
as if they were still there. The box is laboriously
built round the place where they ought to be, and
the spider refuses to budge from the empty casket,
though there is no longer any treasure to guard.</p>
<p>Clearly as the egg-laying time approaches the
spider feels an irresistible blind impulse to perform
in a definite order certain complicated actions. It is
like a machine actuated by an internal spring, and
in the spider’s case the internal spring is the inherited
nervous mechanism we call instinct, which
urges it to actions which it is not in the least necessary
that it should understand.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span></p>
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