-40%

Golden Orb Weaver Spider in 110x43x30 mm Clear Resin Block Teaching Aid BK3

$ 10.03

Availability: 57 in stock
  • Material: Resin
  • Animal Class: Spider
  • Type: Collector Plate
  • Modification Description: NA
  • Modified Item: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: China
  • Condition: New
  • Handmade: Yes

    Description

    Real Golden Orb Weaver Spider - Nephila pilipes specimen encased in clear lucite material. The specimen is crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put real Spider right at your fingertips!
    You can explore the Spider from every angle.
    Clear enough for microscope observation.
    Length of the Spider body is 3 cm (1.2 inch).
    Size of the lucite block is 11x4.3x3 cm(4.3x1.7x1.2 inch).
    Each one comes with a cardboard box for easy storage.
    Weight of the block is 150 g and 180 g with packing box.
    Selltotheworld
    From all around the world
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider in 110x43x30 mm Clear Resin Block Teaching Aid BK3
    Real
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider -
    Nephila pilipes
    specimen encased in clear lucite material. The specimen is crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put real Spider right at your fingertips!
    You can explore the Spider from every angle.
    Clear enough for microscope observation.
    Length of the Spider body is 3 cm (1.2 inch).
    Size of the lucite block is 11x4.3x3 cm(4.3x1.7x1.2 inch).
    Each one comes with a cardboard box for easy storage.
    Weight of the block is 150 g and 180 g with packing box.
    It is an ideal learning aid for students and kids and also a very good collectible item for every body.
    This is a handmade real animal specimen craft. Each one will be a bit different (specimen size, color and posture) even in the same production batch.
    The pictures in the listing are just for reference as we are selling multiple pieces with same pictures.
    ***
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider -
    Nephila pilipes
    Order: Araneae  Suborder: Araneomorphae  Family: Nephilidae  Genus:
    Nephila
    Species:
    N. pilipes
    Common names: Giant Golden Orb Web Spider or
    Giant
    W
    ood
    S
    pider
    Main features: Large (female only) shiny legs with red or yellow 'joints', builds large orb webs.
    Female: 20cm across from toe to toe, with a body about 3-5cm; males are only one-tenth as big, at 5-6mm.
    Status: Common in rainforest, secondary vegetation and mangroves
    World distribution: Tropical areas from Africa, India, China, Japan across Southeast Asia to Northern Australia and the South Pacific islands.
    Classification: Family Araneidae which build orb-webs. Nephila maculata is the largest of its genus.
    Webs of steel: The Golden Orb Web Spider is not the largest spider, but makes the largest and strongest web. It gets its name from the golden colour of its silk.
    Nephila pilipes
    (
    northern golden orb weaver
    or
    giant golden orb weaver
    ) is a species of golden orb-web spider. It resides all over countries in East and Southeast Asia as well as Oceania. It is commonly found in primary and secondary forests and gardens. Females are large and grow to a body size of 30–50 mm (overall size up to 20 cm), with males growing to 5–6 mm. It is the second largest of the orb-weaving spiders apart from the recently discovered
    Nephila komaci
    . The first, second, and fourth pairs of legs of juvenile females have dense hairy brushes, but these brushes disappear as the spider matures.
    The
    N. pilipes
    golden web is vertical with a fine irregular mesh. It is not symmetrical, with the hub usually nearer the top. Rather than egg sacs being hung in the web, a pit is dug which is then covered with plant debris or soil.
    The web can run from the top of a tree 6m high and up to 2m wide. Unlike other spider webs, the Golden Orb Web Spider's web is not dismantled often and can last several years.
    Designed to catch large flying insects, the web is slightly angled. It is not a perfect wheel and is usually off-centre. To make its web, the spider releases a thin thread into the wind. When it catches on something, the spider walks along it trailing a stronger non-sticky thread. It repeats the process in the centre of the line to form a strong Y-frame. Around this, it spins the rest of the web out of sticky capture silk.
    The silk is so strong that it can trap small birds, which the spider doesn't eat. These trapped creatures often destroy the web by thrashing around. To avoid such damage, the spider often leaves a line of insect husks on its web (like the safety strip across glass doors!); or builds smaller barrier webs around the main web.
    Breeding: The male is many times smaller than the female, some are 1,000 smaller! There are suggestions that it is not a case of the males being dwarves, but the females being giants! The male is so tiny that he can live on the female's web, stealing her food, often without her even noticing him. She may not even notice that he has crept up and inseminated her! Nevertheless, just to be sure, he usually does the deed when she is feeding. In some, mating can take up to 15 hours! The female lives only slightly longer than the male.
    The female buries her eggs in the ground. First she digs a shallow hole with her strong mandibles and legs, which is then lined with woolly silk. She lays her eggs on this silk, covers it with another woolly layer then covers the whole assembly with camouflaging debris and soil. Laying can take 4 hours. Spiderlings hatch with their eggyolks still attached and don't have fully developed mouthparts, venom glands, digestive tracts or spinning organs. They may stay together at this stage. When they are fully developed, they have to disperse or they will cannibalise each other.
    Role in the habitat: Like other predators, the spiders control the population of prey. They are in turn preyed upon by other creatures such as birds. In New Guinea, some tribes consider them a tasty treat. The Golden Orb Web Spider's venom is generally harmless to humans and they rarely bite even if we blunder into and destroy their webs. The bite is just a scratch. They are clumsy on the ground.
    Uses by humans: Tribal people have long used the webs of these spiders. In the South Pacific, the web silk is used to make fishing lures, traps and nets. In the Solomon Islands, the spider web is collected by winding it around sticks to make large sticky balls which are suspended just above the water. Needle fish are lured to jump out and get entangled in the ball. In Southeast Asia, people make a net by scooping up the web between a stick bent into a loop. Spider webs have been used as bandage to stop blood flow and used to make bird snares.
    In modern times, the Golden Orb Web Spider's silk is set to become a major product. The silk is almost as strong as Kevlar, the strongest man-made material which is drawn from concentrated sulphuric acid. In contrast, spider silk is drawn from water. If we could manufacture spider silk, it would have a million uses from parachutes, bullet-proof vests, lightweight clothing, seatbelts, light but strong ropes, as sutures in operations, artificial tendons and ligaments. Studies are now being done to have genetically engineered plants produce fluid polymers which can be processed into silk! Spiders are not used to produce silk fabric because Silkworm Moth caterpillars produce twice as much silk and are easier to manage (for example, they don't eat each other up!!).
    Item Specifics
    Type :
    Collector Plate
    Modification Description :
    NA
    California Prop 65 Warning :
    NA
    Modified Item :
    No
    Country/Region of Manufacture :
    China
    Handmade :
    Yes
    Animal Class :
    Spider
    Material :
    Resin
    Payment
    By Paypal
    Shipping
    Free shipping cost.
    We send the goods to USA, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, EU countries and some other European and Asian countries by E-express, a kind of fast postal service by Hong Kong Post. It usually takes about 6 to 10 working days for delivery.
    We send the goods to other countries by registered airmail and will take about 8 to 14 working days for delivery.
    Returns
    Returns: We accept returns with any reason in 30 days.
    Contact Us
    We will answer buyer messages within 24 hours during working days.
    Selltotheworld
    From all around the world
    DESCRIPTION
    PAYMENT
    SHIPPING
    RETURN POLICY
    CONTACT US
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider in 110x43x30 mm Clear Resin Block Teaching Aid BK3
    Real
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider -
    Nephila pilipes
    specimen encased in clear lucite material. The specimen is crystal clear, indestructible and transparent. Safe, authentic and completely unbreakable product put real Spider right at your fingertips!
    You can explore the Spider from every angle.
    Clear enough for microscope observation.
    Length of the Spider body is 3 cm (1.2 inch).
    Size of the lucite block is 11x4.3x3 cm(4.3x1.7x1.2 inch).
    Each one comes with a cardboard box for easy storage.
    Weight of the block is 150 g and 180 g with packing box.
    It is an ideal learning aid for students and kids and also a very good collectible item for every body.
    This is a handmade real animal specimen craft. Each one will be a bit different (specimen size, color and posture) even in the same production batch.
    The pictures in the listing are just for reference as we are selling multiple pieces with same pictures.
    ***
    Golden Orb Weaver Spider -
    Nephila pilipes
    Order: Araneae  Suborder: Araneomorphae  Family: Nephilidae  Genus:
    Nephila
    Species:
    N. pilipes
    Common names: Giant Golden Orb Web Spider or
    Giant
    W
    ood
    S
    pider
    Main features: Large (female only) shiny legs with red or yellow 'joints', builds large orb webs.
    Female: 20cm across from toe to toe, with a body about 3-5cm; males are only one-tenth as big, at 5-6mm.
    Status: Common in rainforest, secondary vegetation and mangroves
    World distribution: Tropical areas from Africa, India, China, Japan across Southeast Asia to Northern Australia and the South Pacific islands.
    Classification: Family Araneidae which build orb-webs. Nephila maculata is the largest of its genus.
    Webs of steel: The Golden Orb Web Spider is not the largest spider, but makes the largest and strongest web. It gets its name from the golden colour of its silk.
    Nephila pilipes
    (
    northern golden orb weaver
    or
    giant golden orb weaver
    ) is a species of golden orb-web spider. It resides all over countries in East and Southeast Asia as well as Oceania. It is commonly found in primary and secondary forests and gardens. Females are large and grow to a body size of 30–50 mm (overall size up to 20 cm), with males growing to 5–6 mm. It is the second largest of the orb-weaving spiders apart from the recently discovered
    Nephila komaci
    . The first, second, and fourth pairs of legs of juvenile females have dense hairy brushes, but these brushes disappear as the spider matures.
    The
    N. pilipes
    golden web is vertical with a fine irregular mesh. It is not symmetrical, with the hub usually nearer the top. Rather than egg sacs being hung in the web, a pit is dug which is then covered with plant debris or soil.
    The web can run from the top of a tree 6m high and up to 2m wide. Unlike other spider webs, the Golden Orb Web Spider's web is not dismantled often and can last several years.
    Designed to catch large flying insects, the web is slightly angled. It is not a perfect wheel and is usually off-centre. To make its web, the spider releases a thin thread into the wind. When it catches on something, the spider walks along it trailing a stronger non-sticky thread. It repeats the process in the centre of the line to form a strong Y-frame. Around this, it spins the rest of the web out of sticky capture silk.
    The silk is so strong that it can trap small birds, which the spider doesn't eat. These trapped creatures often destroy the web by thrashing around. To avoid such damage, the spider often leaves a line of insect husks on its web (like the safety strip across glass doors!); or builds smaller barrier webs around the main web.
    Breeding: The male is many times smaller than the female, some are 1,000 smaller! There are suggestions that it is not a case of the males being dwarves, but the females being giants! The male is so tiny that he can live on the female's web, stealing her food, often without her even noticing him. She may not even notice that he has crept up and inseminated her! Nevertheless, just to be sure, he usually does the deed when she is feeding. In some, mating can take up to 15 hours! The female lives only slightly longer than the male.
    The female buries her eggs in the ground. First she digs a shallow hole with her strong mandibles and legs, which is then lined with woolly silk. She lays her eggs on this silk, covers it with another woolly layer then covers the whole assembly with camouflaging debris and soil. Laying can take 4 hours. Spiderlings hatch with their eggyolks still attached and don't have fully developed mouthparts, venom glands, digestive tracts or spinning organs. They may stay together at this stage. When they are fully developed, they have to disperse or they will cannibalise each other.
    Role in the habitat: Like other predators, the spiders control the population of prey. They are in turn preyed upon by other creatures such as birds. In New Guinea, some tribes consider them a tasty treat. The Golden Orb Web Spider's venom is generally harmless to humans and they rarely bite even if we blunder into and destroy their webs. The bite is just a scratch. They are clumsy on the ground.
    Uses by humans: Tribal people have long used the webs of these spiders. In the South Pacific, the web silk is used to make fishing lures, traps and nets. In the Solomon Islands, the spider web is collected by winding it around sticks to make large sticky balls which are suspended just above the water. Needle fish are lured to jump out and get entangled in the ball. In Southeast Asia, people make a net by scooping up the web between a stick bent into a loop. Spider webs have been used as bandage to stop blood flow and used to make bird snares.
    In modern times, the Golden Orb Web Spider's silk is set to become a major product. The silk is almost as strong as Kevlar, the strongest man-made material which is drawn from concentrated sulphuric acid. In contrast, spider silk is drawn from water. If we could manufacture spider silk, it would have a million uses from parachutes, bullet-proof vests, lightweight clothing, seatbelts, light but strong ropes, as sutures in operations, artificial tendons and ligaments. Studies are now being done to have genetically engineered plants produce fluid polymers which can be processed into silk! Spiders are not used to produce silk fabric because Silkworm Moth caterpillars produce twice as much silk and are easier to manage (for example, they don't eat each other up!!).
    Item Specifics
    Type :
    Collector Plate
    Modification Description :
    NA
    California Prop 65 Warning :
    NA
    Modified Item :
    No
    Country/Region of Manufacture :
    China
    Handmade :
    Yes
    Animal Class :
    Spider
    Material :
    Resin
    Payment
    By Paypal
    Shipping
    Free shipping cost.
    We send the goods to USA, Canada, UK, Australia, New Zealand, EU countries and some other European and Asian countries by E-express, a kind of fast postal service by Hong Kong Post. It usually takes about 6 to 10 working days for delivery.
    We send the goods to other countries by registered airmail and will take about 8 to 14 working days for delivery.
    Returns
    Returns: We accept returns with any reason in 30 days.
    Contact Us
    We will answer buyer messages within 24 hours during working days.
    All right reserved.
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