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Housing Spiders in the Classroom
Wolf spiders are relatively easy to keep if you keep in mind some basic requirements.
For classroom study, it works well to collect some spiders, hold them for several
days and then release them where they were originally found.
Water
If you are trying to keep spiderlings or baby spiders remember that the surface
tension of water is stronger than they are! With baby spiders it is important to
not have freestanding drops of water.
Feeding
Wolf spiders will eat a large number of different kinds of prey.
They can take a prey item their own size or smaller and do best with flies,
crickets and other spiders. The exoskeleton on many beetles is too tough.
In addition to taking live prey, wolf spiders will scavenge and get nourishment
from carcasses. You can sometimes see a spider pick up a leg or a wing from a cricket. Different species may show different prey preferences or abilities to subdue prey. Also, species may differ in how much they are willing to scavenge. Some insects may have some defenses against spiders.
Potential prey items for wolf spiders include house flies and mosquitos, crickets,
beetle larvae (meal worms) and other spiders. Wolf spiders often will capture a prey
item by grabbing the prey and then the spider will flip over onto its back while
holding the prey item in its fangs. This may be particularly useful when
grabbing a cricket as the strong jumping legs of the cricket could puncture the
spiders abdomen. A good class project would be to determine the range of prey
items a particular spider could eat. Depending on the size of the prey, spiders
can be offered food daily; they also do fine eating once or twice a week.
A good rule of thumb for the size of the prey is to offer spiders prey their
own size or smaller.
Cages
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