Spider 30 is released from tap water

Updated on healthy 2024-04-08
34 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    That thing is an antspider! Antspiders belong to the class Arachnida, Arachnidae, jumping spiders, and antspiders. The body shape and color are ant-shaped, and the back of the cephalothorax is narrow.

    There is a tight shackle between the head and the chest, and the ventral stem is clearly visible. The eye area is almost square. The male spider chelicerae are extremely well developed, long and stout, protruding forward.

    Females have flat tentacles and are easily mistaken for males. It inhabits mountainous fields and forests, and mostly nets on leaves, feeding on ants and other small insects.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    Diving bell spider. Spiders are a typical terrestrial animal. But the water spider (also known as the silver spider) is the only rebel of its kind - living in the world of water.

    When they dive into the water, the waterproof fluff that grows all over their bodies will attach many bubbles, as if they have entered a closed casing with a layer of air. This peculiar air shield makes the water spider a ball of mercury that shines brightly. Occasionally, they will poke out of the water with the end of their abdomen and hold up a large bubble to swagger through the market.

    Water spiders are good at spinning silk and forming webs between aquatic plants. Because of the storage of bubbles under the web, the original webs are in the shape of a bell, like a small caisson, and they are encamped in the caissons, in which the female lays eggs and hatches. The bubble swarm that the water spider has is not only an oxygen reservoir, but also an oxygen concentrator – constantly drawing oxygen from the surrounding water.

    This is what people call the "physical lungs" oxygen delivery device. The oxygen concentration in the bubble gradually decreases during the breathing process of the water spider, and once the oxygen content is below 16%, the oxygen dissolved in the water will replenish itself into the bubble. Usually when the spider is at rest, the physical lungs are sufficient to ensure oxygen supply; When the oxygen consumption is too high, the supply of oxygen-containing bubbles in the water will exceed the demand, and the proportion of other gases in the bubbles will rise until it greatly exceeds the proportion in the air.

    As a result, the nitrogen begins to diffuse into the water, and the volume of the bubbles decreases accordingly (as the oxygen is depleted), and eventually, the spider has to reappear on the water and re-oxygenate the oxygen reservoir.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    It should be spiders, some spiders will not be soaked when they are in the water, and will be surrounded by a cloud of bubbles.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Oh, and that sounds like Red Spider! A pest. It's a tiny kind, like the one sometimes seen on peach trees.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    It's not like it, mosquito larvae, it's kind of like what you described.

    It's not clear, there is always a smell of branches and leaves being blistered in the water in our house recently, and I don't dare to use it when I brush my teeth.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    Water fly bars, dragonfly larvae, it's fun, and sometimes in the pool.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Does it come out of the water pipe? The vitality is really violent. I've seen centipede-like myriapods in my bathroom, but they're a little shorter than centipedes, but they don't come out of a water pipe.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Isn't it a mosquito larvae?

    What you're talking about seems to have been seen on a show that seems to float on the surface.

    I'll check it out for you when I'm free.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    That's a bloodworm that is used to raise fish.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The water fly is the larva of a dragonfly, and it can't be so small.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    It's a spider,"jimddr"Said the same as I thought.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Spider? It's disgusting. How could it be!

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Oh, my God. Disgusting to death. I'm going to find a water company to respond.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    Raise it, raise it and look at it.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Spiders are not afraid of water, and there is one species of spider that even lives on the surface of the water.

    When a spider falls into the water, it quickly shrinks into an inner mass, and when it sees that there is nothing else around, it is busy swimming on eight legs, and less than 2% of the world's spiders die in the water. (Most of the people who die in the water are exhausted because they can't find the shore.)

    The hairs on the spider's feet can provide a large surface area for the spider so that there is little pressure on the water. If we use the surface of the water as a quilt, if you press it gently, the nest will be very small, and when your press is small enough, the quilt will not change. So the spider can't sink.

    Ants have a waxy substance on their feet that can also prevent them from drowning. But I don't remember if there were spiders too.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Some spiders are afraid of water, but some are not, and there is one species of spider that lives by fishing in the water.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    The average spider is copied and can be drowned.

    The spider breathes by the book lungs in the abdomen, and the average spider will die of suffocation if it invades the water for a period of time if it invades the book lung hole.

    But there is a kind of spider that lives in the water, it builds a nest in the water, this spider can use the fluff on the hind legs and body to form a bubble in the abdomen, carry the bubble into the water, can be used for him to breathe for a while, when there is no oxygen to return to the surface of the water to breathe, but this spider should also be drowned if it is not ventilated for a long time.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    The main component of spider webs is protein, which will decompose quickly when exposed to fire, so spider webs are afraid of fire. The inner and cobweb elasticity is good, and the wind area.

    Small, so not afraid of the wind. The surface of the spider web has grease to make it waterproof.

    The spider has oil on its body, and it does not get wet when it sees water, but the spider breathes by the book lungs in the abdomen, and the average spider will die of suffocation if it invades the water for a period of time if it invades the book lung hole.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Although it is said that the spider has oily du on it

    Seeing that the water does not get wet, but the spider breathes by the book lungs in the abdomen, and the general spider will die of suffocation if it invades the book lung hole it contains into the water for a period of time.

    There is a kind of spider that lives in the water, it builds a nest in the water, this spider can use the fluff on the hind legs and body to form a bubble in the abdomen, carry the bubble into the water, can be used for him to breathe for a while, when there is no oxygen to return to the surface of the water to breathe, but this spider should also be drowned if it is not ventilated for a long time.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    I have never seen a spider afraid of water, and it crawls very quickly on the water.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    I put the spider in a bottle, it was filled with water, and without a little air, it just died

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    Any bug will be scalded to death with boiling water

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    Although it is said that the spider has the oil on its body, and the water is not wet, the spider breathes by the book lungs in the abdomen, and the average spider will die of suffocation if it invades the water for a period of time if its book lung hole is invaded.

    There is a kind of spider that lives in the water, it builds a nest in the water, this spider can use the fluff on the hind legs and body to form a bubble in the abdomen, carry the bubble into the water, can be used for him to breathe for a while, when there is no oxygen to return to the surface of the water to breathe, but this spider should also be drowned if it is not ventilated for a long time.

    Although it is said that the spider has oil on its body and does not get wet when it sees water, the spider breathes by the book lungs in the abdomen, and the average spider will die of suffocation if it invades the water for a period of time if it invades the book lung hole.

    There is a kind of spider that lives in the water, it builds a nest in the water, this spider can use the fluff on the hind legs and body to form a bubble in the abdomen, carry the bubble into the water, can be used for him to breathe for a while, when there is no oxygen to return to the surface of the water to breathe, but this spider should also be drowned if it is not ventilated for a long time.

    Ordinary spiders can be drowned, spiders rely on the book lungs in the abdomen to breathe, and if the average spider invades the water for a period of time, the average spider will die of suffocation.

    But there is a kind of spider that lives in the water, it builds a nest in the water, this spider can use the fluff on the hind legs and body to form a bubble in the abdomen, carry the bubble into the water, can be used for him to breathe for a while, when there is no oxygen to return to the surface of the water to breathe, but this spider should also be drowned if it is not ventilated for a long time.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    Spiders are not afraid of water

    Can't drown! The best way to do this is to slip on !! Haha

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-14

    Don't be afraid, spiders have oil on them.

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-13

    Actually, it's also meant to be bathed.

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-12

    Don't be afraid, the spider has oil on its body, and it will not get wet when you see water.

  28. Anonymous users2024-01-11

    Ordinary spiders, are they afraid of water?

  29. Anonymous users2024-01-10

    But the Water Spider (also known as the Silver Spider) is the only rebel of its kind. It lives in the world of water. When the water spider dives into the water, many air bubbles will be attached to the waterproof fluff all over the body, as if entering a closed casing with a layer of air.

    This peculiar air shield makes the water spider a ball of mercury that shines brightly. Occasionally, it will poke out of the water with the end of its abdomen and hold up a large bubble to swagger through the market.

    Water spiders are good at spinning silk and forming webs between aquatic plants. Due to the storage of air bubbles under the web, the originally unfolded spider web became a bell-shaped, like a small caisson. It is encamped in caissons, where the female lays her eggs and hatches.

    The bubble swarm of water spiders is not only an oxygen reservoir, but also an oxygen concentrator – constantly drawing oxygen from the water. This is what people call the "physical lungs" oxygen delivery device. The oxygen concentration in the bubble gradually decreases during the breathing process of the water spider, and when the oxygen content is below 16, the oxygen dissolved in the water will replenish itself into the bubble.

    Usually when the spider is at rest, the physical lungs are sufficient to ensure oxygen supply; When oxygen consumption exceeds demand, the proportion of other gases in the bubble rises until it significantly exceeds the proportion in the air. As a result, the nitrogen begins to diffuse into the water, and the volume of the bubbles decreases accordingly, and eventually the water spider has to resurface on the water and re-oxygenate the oxygen reservoir.

  30. Anonymous users2024-01-09

    Just like an embroidery needle lying flat on water, the water has a certain surface tension, and the water spider has countless fine hairs on its legs, and the fine hairs help it float on the water.

  31. Anonymous users2024-01-08

    By the waterproof fluff that grows on its body.

  32. Anonymous users2024-01-07

    If it's the kind of soil spider that crawls casually at home, it's not poisonous.

    Water spiders are generally not poisonous, but if the spider is very brightly colored, it is usually poisonous, and you have to trample it to death quickly, otherwise it will bite.

  33. Anonymous users2024-01-06

    If you don't know it's poisonous, it bites you again, and you're dead.

  34. Anonymous users2024-01-05

    Diving bell spider. Because the front of this water bead is a water word, so it is said that it is a kind of spider that can live in the water, and there is also a kind of spider whose name is called spider, not called spider, so it can't live in water, why does Uncle Shen live in water, because there are always some bubbles on his head, and these bubbles are made by himself, unlike those who are obsessed with spending money and can't talk about bubbles.

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