Cryoraptor
Arachnopeon
- Joined
- May 26, 2020
- Messages
- 2
Hello everyone! I've had cellar spiders naturally living in my house since forever and kinda left them to their own devices, but I am now taking an interest in them.
I have had around 3 or 4 cellars naturally living in my room this year intermittently. That might sound like a lot but most years I have 6-10, so I took it upon myself to search the house for new roommates to add to my collection, and found nothing apart from a dead crane fly and wolf spider in old, abandoned webs. I found a few suspected Tegenaria webs but I'd rather leave them alone as they do creep me out a little, not to mention they'd probably end up as food for the cellars.
Moving on, I went into the garage as a last resort and found numerous cellars of differing ages and sizes. I managed to capture about 5 of them, with 2 being brooding females, 2-3 males and one young female that might end up becoming food. One of them already had a male partner, but sadly he fled and I couldn't catch him. To my delight though, I have woken up this morning to see that one of the females has already paired with another male, either one I captured or one that was already living in my room, meaning I can expect spiderlings in the near future. I know that cellars usually lay their eggs around June time, so this is the perfect time to expose both sexes to one another.
Anyway, to get to the point of this thread, I deliberately leave my window open at dusk so that moths, caddisflies and other small insects can fly in. I doubt that they work out how to fly back out so in the morning when all but a couple have disappeared, I assume that the cellar spiders are capturing and eating most of them. Am I right to assume that cellar spiders will go after small prey like this? I am well aware that they readily eat monster-size crane flies (that I will 100% NOT let into my room as I am somehow extremely entomophobic) and spiders bigger than themselves; a few weeks ago I witnessed a decent-sized wolf spider getting jumped and eaten by one of my cellars.
If not, what can I do to help them along with food as I know that if they feel like they aren't getting enough food, they will end up killing each other, which is what I don't want. I have more than enough room to accommodate for at least 50 cellars if they were to somehow have access to enough food for that many, so I want to make sure they are receiving ample food supplies to keep breeding and populating my room with new spiderlings.
Thanks for any and all advice
I have had around 3 or 4 cellars naturally living in my room this year intermittently. That might sound like a lot but most years I have 6-10, so I took it upon myself to search the house for new roommates to add to my collection, and found nothing apart from a dead crane fly and wolf spider in old, abandoned webs. I found a few suspected Tegenaria webs but I'd rather leave them alone as they do creep me out a little, not to mention they'd probably end up as food for the cellars.
Moving on, I went into the garage as a last resort and found numerous cellars of differing ages and sizes. I managed to capture about 5 of them, with 2 being brooding females, 2-3 males and one young female that might end up becoming food. One of them already had a male partner, but sadly he fled and I couldn't catch him. To my delight though, I have woken up this morning to see that one of the females has already paired with another male, either one I captured or one that was already living in my room, meaning I can expect spiderlings in the near future. I know that cellars usually lay their eggs around June time, so this is the perfect time to expose both sexes to one another.
Anyway, to get to the point of this thread, I deliberately leave my window open at dusk so that moths, caddisflies and other small insects can fly in. I doubt that they work out how to fly back out so in the morning when all but a couple have disappeared, I assume that the cellar spiders are capturing and eating most of them. Am I right to assume that cellar spiders will go after small prey like this? I am well aware that they readily eat monster-size crane flies (that I will 100% NOT let into my room as I am somehow extremely entomophobic) and spiders bigger than themselves; a few weeks ago I witnessed a decent-sized wolf spider getting jumped and eaten by one of my cellars.
If not, what can I do to help them along with food as I know that if they feel like they aren't getting enough food, they will end up killing each other, which is what I don't want. I have more than enough room to accommodate for at least 50 cellars if they were to somehow have access to enough food for that many, so I want to make sure they are receiving ample food supplies to keep breeding and populating my room with new spiderlings.
Thanks for any and all advice