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He said about a dozen of them collected bugs from the walls and ceiling of the cave and put them in vials of preservative, then sent them down to the academy. "We don't know exactly how they work yet," Griswold said of the spiders. "We've seen these spiders alive. But we haven't seen them eat anything yet. They are very shy. "They make a little web, but hang under this web. They hang some of their legs out in space. This is all in the dark in a cave. We think the legs are stretched out waiting for something to come by, like a fly, and when it hits the legs, the claws may just snap shut." Though scientists built a small artificial cave for the spiders in their lab, the spiders would not eat any of the insects, and died.
Griswold said new families of spiders are described around the world every 20 years or so, but the last ones to be found in North America date to the 1870s, when two families of desert spiders were found in Southern California, Arizona and Mexico, and another was found in the Appalachian Mountains. After the spiders were found in the Oregon cave, scientists from San Diego State University went looking in the redwoods of Northern California, and found a spider in the same family, but a new species, living in underground cavities beneath boulders and logs, Griswold said. ___ Online: California Academy of Sciences: ZooKeys: http://bit.ly/OnlQqU
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