
The Curious Webspinner Insect Knits a Cozy Home
Season 6 Episode 20 | 4m 39sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
Female webspinners shoot super-fine silk from their front feet.
To protect herself and her eggs, female webspinners shoot super-fine silk from their front feet. They weave the strands to build a shelter that serves as a tent, umbrella and invisibility cloak. But shooting silk from her feet requires her to moonwalk to get around.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADProblems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback

The Curious Webspinner Insect Knits a Cozy Home
Season 6 Episode 20 | 4m 39sVideo has Audio Description, Closed Captions
To protect herself and her eggs, female webspinners shoot super-fine silk from their front feet. They weave the strands to build a shelter that serves as a tent, umbrella and invisibility cloak. But shooting silk from her feet requires her to moonwalk to get around.
See all videos with Audio DescriptionADProblems with Closed Captions? Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship♪ (narrator) Okay, under a log, you uncover a wispy, white web.
You're thinking spider.
Not so fast.
This maze of woven silk has nothing to do with arachnids.
It's actually created by a kind of insect called a web spinner.
They're related to stick insects and praying mantises.
Never heard of them?
Not surprised.
They give spiders a run for their money.
Their handiwork is a tent, umbrella, and invisibility cloak all in one.
But while spiders produce silk from their back ends, a web spinner's silk comes from her feet.
Yep, her front feet.
She intertwines the strands, weaving back and forth, back and forth.
She has tiny, hair-like ejectors on the bottom of each foot which shoot out the silk.
It's the thinnest silk of any animal.
The work is painstaking.
But the result is pretty cozy, kind of like a quilted roof.
Their home, also known as a gallery, is their only defense, hiding their soft bodies from predators.
There is also plenty of moss and lichen to eat inside.
So why leave?
And if they need to do some housekeeping, it's easy to take out the trash.
They just stick it to the roof and forget about it.
The silk also keeps out something they really like to avoid-- rain.
Web spinners can easily drown if a downpour floods their gallery.
Luckily, they've got exceptional weather-proofing.
Water just beads up on the silk surface, like on a rose petal.
And that water actually changes the silk, making the surface more slippery by transforming the proteins, so it becomes extra waterproof.
But having silk-slinging front feet has a downside.
Say an unwanted visitor comes along.
If they want to get away, web spinners have to tiptoe to avoid triggering their silk ejectors.
Not exactly the fastest runner.
So to escape, web spinners dart backwards to avoid getting tangled up.
They're much faster in reverse.
Small price to pay for the ability to weave an entire hidden world, one that will keep the web spinners and their young safe for generations to come.
Hi, it's Lauren.
Music fans, here's a special playlist for you of Deep Look creatures that make music of their own.
Also, check out Sound Field, a new show from PBS Digital Studios that breaks down our favorite songs and artists from all genres, from Bach to Beyoncé.
It's hosted by two amazing musicians, Nahre Sol and "L.A." Buckner, who even come up with an original song in every episode.
Link is in the description.
Thanks.
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