Spiders are Really Good Guys

Do you cringe when you happen upon an eight-legged creature scurrying across your front porch?  If it’s a spider, you’re in good company. Fear of spiders, known as arachnophobia, is one of the most common phobias around. It may come from concern about being bitten by a deadly type or simply the idea of the “creepy, crawling” things and their reputation promoted by myth and media. Before you stomp on or otherwise dispose of it, consider that most spiders are hugely beneficial critters, feeding on pest insects in the house and garden.  

Spiders, along with scorpions, mites and ticks, are arachnids with eight legged creatures with two body regions, six or eight simple eyes and a pair of jaw-like structures used to eject their venom. These voracious predators have a wide variety of prey, feasting on insects, other spiders, and related arthropods. They produce silk to make their webs, trapping their meals, enclose their egg sacs and line burrows and to float through the air (ballooning). The silk can be sticky, dry, or stretchy depending on the type of spider, and is one of the strongest materials in the world.

As garden good guys, you don’t want to kill these helpers, though you may want to keep them out of the house. Try the mechanical approach – close up window and door openings that allow entry (including penetrations around water pipes, electrical lines, and foundation cracks). Inspect firewood before bringing indoors and keep woodpiles and other debris away from the house. Remove webs with brooms and vacuum them up, or outdoors, use a high-pressure hose. 

The one spider you do want to be aware of is the female black widow, with their shiny black bodies and distinctive red hourglass marking on their underside. Only large female black widows can injure people. They’re pretty common in stacked garden pots and other sheltered, dry, undisturbed areas.  If you are bitten by a black widow spider, remain calm and seek medical advice, or call the California Poison Control Center at 1-800-8-POISON.

So, if you do happen upon a spider or two in the garden (other than the black widow), just ignore them and let them do their thing – helping to keep your garden pests in check.

Click here to learn about some common spiders you’ll find in the garden and here to see photos of the frequently seen spiders.

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