Life

Walk into my parlor: Greek spiders spin giant web over shore

September 23, 2018



Trees, bushes and seaside vegetation along a beach at Aitoliko, in western Greece, are seen on Sunday covered in thick spiders’ webs. - AP
Trees, bushes and seaside vegetation along a beach at Aitoliko, in western Greece, are seen on Sunday covered in thick spiders’ webs. - AP



ATHENS, Greece — It’s not quite the World Wide Web - but the spiders of Aitoliko in Greece have made a good start. Spurred into overdrive by an explosion in the populations of insects they eat, thousands of little spiders in the western Greek town have shrouded coastal trees, bushes and low vegetation in thick webs. The sticky white lines extend for a few hundred meters along the shoreline of Aitoliko, built on an artificial island in a salt lagoon near Missolonghi, 250 kilometers west of Athens. Experts told local media that the numbers of lake flies, a non-biting midge, have rocketed amid humid late summer conditions.

— AP

Spiders, which fancy the flies, reproduced fast to take full advantage of the feast. Residents say the extensive spider webs have another benefit: Keeping down mosquitoes. — AP


September 23, 2018
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