Spiders in Space tagged posts

Spiders in Space: Without Gravity, Light becomes key to Orientation

A black and white picture of a spider in its web in the experimental container on board the ISS
A specimen of the spider species Trichonephila clavipes on board the international space station ISS. (Photo: BioServe Space Technologies, University of Colorado Boulder

Humans have taken spiders into space more than once to study the importance of gravity to their web-building. What originally began as a somewhat unsuccessful PR experiment for high school students has yielded the surprising insight that light plays a larger role in arachnid orientation than previously thought.

The spider experiment by the US space agency NASA is a lesson in the frustrating failures and happy accidents that sometimes lead to unexpected research findings. The question was relatively simple: on Earth, spiders build asymmetrical webs with the center displaced towards the upper edge...

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