<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</SPAN></h2>
<p class="center">WATER-SPIDERS</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Here</span> is the place to insert a short account of some
near relations of <i>Agelena</i> which we shall certainly
not meet in our walk, but of which the mode of life is
too interesting to be altogether passed over in silence.</p>
<p>We have seen that the class Crustacea (crabs,
shrimps, etc.) is the great division of the Arthropoda
entirely adapted to an aquatic life, breathing, by
means of gills, the air which is dissolved in the water.
Insects and spiders are air-breathing, and properly
belong to the land; yet there are many insects which
pass their early stages—often the greater portion of
their life—in the water, and some which are very
fairly at home there when adult. Such insects often
have gills when young, and are therefore at that
period true water animals, like the Crustacea.</p>
<p>The Arachnida—that division of the Arthropoda
to which the spiders belong—include a few groups
which permanently inhabit the sea, and could not
live on land. There are even some weird creatures
called Sea-spiders (Pycnogonids), but these do not
concern us, for they are very far removed from the
true spiders which are the subject of our investigations.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Now the true spiders are always air-breathing,
and if they venture into the water at all they must
frequently come up to the surface to breathe, or else
they must store up a reservoir of air beneath the
surface of the water if they are to avoid death by
drowning. Nevertheless some of them have been
hardy enough to encroach on the domain of the
Crustacea. Not a few are able to run freely on
the surface of the water and even to dive occasionally
for the purpose of seizing one of its denizens, but the
number of those which have succeeded in really
adapting themselves to aquatic life is very limited,
and is, as far as we know, restricted to two small
groups, both of them members of the Agelenidae.</p>
<p>Among the coral reefs of the Indian and Pacific
oceans, and also off the southern coast of Africa there
are found spiders of the genus <i>Desis</i> which spend
almost all their time under the surface of the sea,
from which they only emerge at low tide. They
construct very closely woven tents, impermeable to
sea-water, which imprison air at low tide, generally
choosing for the purpose some cavity which has been
excavated by one of the burrowing molluscs. Beyond
this we really know very little about them, and there
is much difference of opinion as to the mode in which
they obtain their food. Some writers state that they
only leave their shelters at low tide to chase small
crustaceans, and that when placed in vessels containing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span>
sea water they are quite helpless and soon drown. On
the other hand one observer found that a species of
<i>Desis</i> was quite at home in a sea-water tank, in which
it swam freely and even attacked and fed upon a small
fish. Possibly different species of the genus behave
in different ways, some being more truly aquatic than
others, though it is certain that the troubled waters
of a coral sea are not a very promising field for sub-aqueous
operations. We know a great deal more of
the mode of life of those Agelenids which have taken
to living in fresh water. Indeed the subject of the
water-spider, <i>Argyroneta aquatica</i>, is so hackneyed
that in dealing with it we shall probably be telling
the reader much of what he knows already, but that
possibility must be risked.</p>
<p>There is, then, in many of our lakes, ponds and
slow-flowing rivers with a weedy bed, a spider which
has entirely taken to a water life, and for which it is
useless to search on land. It is a docile captive, and
consequently a favourite subject for transference to
an aquarium, where its habits can be observed at
leisure. Its first care is to construct beneath the
water a small dome-shaped web, open below, and it
generally selects the under surface of the leaf of
a water weed for the purpose of anchorage, though a
ready-made shelter is often furnished by the empty
shell of some fresh-water mollusc. Its next proceeding
is to fill this retreat with air in a very ingenious manner.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>While swimming about in the water the spider
has a most striking appearance, its abdomen almost
resembling a globe of quicksilver. This is because
the body is enveloped in a bubble of air, retained
largely by the long hairs with which it is clothed.
Thus it carries its atmosphere about with it, and as
often as not it swims with its back downwards, which
has the effect of bringing the bulk of the air-bubble
towards its ventral surface, where the breathing pores
are situated. Now when the dome-shaped web is
ready to be filled with air the spider rises to the
surface, lifts its abdomen above it, and brings it down
with a flop, thus imprisoning an extra large air-bubble
which it embraces with its hind-legs by way of holding
it more securely, and then, swimming rapidly down
by means of its other legs to the web it discharges its
load of air beneath the downwardly directed mouth
of the dome.</p>
<p>By a frequent repetition of this process the dome is
at length filled and converted into a veritable diving-bell,
in which the spider can exist quite comfortably
until the supply of oxygen in the imprisoned air is
exhausted and has to be renewed. From this base
it issues forth to feed upon fresh-water insects
and crustaceans, sometimes even attacking small
fishes.</p>
<p>The proceedings of the male <i>Argyroneta</i> in the
mating season are very curious. He seeks out the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
tent of a female and sets up his own establishment—generally
somewhat smaller—close at hand, filling it
with air in the approved manner. He then builds a
sort of corridor uniting the two domes, and when this
is complete he bites through the female dome, thus
uniting the two air reservoirs by means of a connecting
tube. Not seldom it happens that the female is
in no mood for dalliance, and a battle royal ensues,
with disastrous results to both domiciles and the tube
that connects them. The male, however, is in this
case well able to hold his own, for he is larger than
the female, a phenomenon elsewhere unknown in the
spider realm. <i>Argyroneta</i> lives for some years, and
makes two diving-bells each year—one near the
surface in summer and one at a greater depth in
winter. It was thought at first that one was constructed
especially for receiving the eggs and the
other as a habitation, but the egg-cocoon may be
found in either, for there are two broods in the course
of the year. The winter dome is of very dense silk,
glossy in appearance, and giving the effect of a uniform
sheet of silky material rather than a fabric. Moreover
its mouth is closed, and the spider remains
inactive within. It is this winter domicile that is
most frequently found in the shells of molluscs. The
egg-cocoon is also dome-shaped, having a convex
upper and a flat under surface. The newly hatched
young inhabit their mother’s tent for a time and then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span>
set forth in the water to seek their living and set up
establishments on their own account.</p>
<p>There is only one known species of <i>Argyroneta</i>,
widely distributed in the temperate regions of
Europe and Asia. The female is about half-an-inch
long, of no particular beauty out of the water, its
colour being reddish-brown, and its body and legs
very hairy. There are, however, a few New Zealand
spiders rather closely allied to it and of very similar
habits.</p>
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