Yellow Sac spiders
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The Yellow Sac Spider (Cheiracanthium inclusum) is also known as the Black-Footed Spider.
The Yellow Sac Spider is one of a group of spiders in North America whose bites are generally considered to be medically significant. It is very common in most of the United States and is the cause of a lot of spider bites and other unwanted encounters.
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Yellow sac spider Description
Yellow Sac Spiders are light yellow to pale yellowish green, sometimes with a orange-brown stripe on top of the abdomen. The cephalothorax (fused head and thorax) of the Yellow Sac Spider is orange brown to reddish and the abdomen is pale yellow to light grey. An adult female sac spiders body is typically 1/4 to 3/8 inches long and it's leg span is up to 1 inch. Males are more slender, with a slightly larger leg span. The first pair of legs is longer than the fourth. Yellow Sac Spiders have eight similarly-sized dark eyes arranged in two horizontal rows.
Yellow sac spider Habitat and Webs
Yellow Sac Spiders take shelter in flattened silk tubes during the day and move about to hunt during the night. Yellow Sac Spiders often live in houses and can frequently be found crawling upon walls or other vertical surfaces.
Yellow Sac Spiders construct a silken tube or sac in a protected area, such as within a leaf, under landscape timbers or logs, or at the junction of a wall and ceiling and they use this sac as their daytime retreat. This is how the Yellow Sac Spiders derives its common name, sac spider. These spiders do not build webs.
Yellow sac spider Diet
Yellow Sac Spiders are active hunters, emerging at twilight from their silken sac to seek out prey. Yellow Sac Spiders prey is a wide diet of arthropods, including spiders larger than themselves and even their own eggs. Outdoors, they often search among foliage, waving their first pair of legs in front of them as they rapidly climb among leaves and stems of plants. Because of their active searching habits, Yellow Sac Spiders often enter homes, particularly during early autumn when their food supply decreases.
Around 30 percent of adult males get killed and consumed by females after mating. A female produces around 5 egg sacs each with around 37 eggs. The eggs are laid in a loose mass and covered with a thin coat of spun silk. The female guards the egg sac until the eggs hatch. Female Yellow Sac Spiders lay eggs in the autumn and the spiderlings emerge from the egg sac during the following spring.
Yellow sac spider Reproduction
After mating, females Yellow Sac Spiders lay 30 to 48 eggs and cover them in a thin coat of loosely spun silk. The small, white, paper-like sacs are often found in easily overlooked locations, along ceilings and corners, or behind pictures and shelves. The female may guard these egg sacs and may produce several egg masses during her lifetime.
The yellow sac spider over winters as spiderlings (juveniles) and molt to the adult stage during spring. Females of the yellow sac spider covers her loosely distributed eggs with thin white silk. Adults can be found from April through November, however, in the hottest month's small spiders makes up the largest proportion of the population.
Yellow sac spider Venom
The chelicerae of Yellow Sac Spiders are very powerful and the fangs can penetrate human skin quite easily. Most bites on humans occur when people are gardening or performing other kinds of outdoor activities. The venom has mild and local cytotoxic (a toxic effect on cells) and neurotoxic (poisonous to nerve tissue, as to the brain or spinal cord) effects. No fatal incidents from encounters with the yellow sac spider have ever been recorded.
It has been noted that a large number of bites attributed to the Brown Recluse spider may actually be the result of yellow sac spider bites.
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Yellow sac spiders