The largest fossil spider uncovered to date once ensnared prey back in the age of dinosaurs , scientists find.
The spider, Named Nephila Jurassica , was discovered buried in ancient volcanic ash in inner Mongolia, China . Tufts of hairlike fibers seen on its legs showed this 165-million-year-old arachnid to be the oldest known species of the largest web-weaving spiders alive today ... the golden orb weavers , or Nephila , which are big enough to catch birds and bats , and use silk that shines like gold in the sunlight.
The fossil was about as large as its modern relatives , with a body one inch (2.5 centimeters) wide and legs that reach up to 2.5 inches (6.3) long . Golden orb-weavers nowadays are mainly tropical creatures , so the ancient environment of Nephila juassica probably was similarly lush .
"It would have lived , like today's Nephila , in its orb web of golden silk in a clearing in a forest or more likely at the edge of a forest close to the lake," says researcher Paul Selden , director of the Paleontological Institute at the University of Kansas , told LiveScience . "There would have been volcanoes nearby producing the ash that forms the lake sediment it is entombed within."
Spiders are the most numerous predators on land today , and help keep insect-spider predator-prey relationship," Selden said , suggesting that golden orb-weavers have been ensnaring insects and influencing their evolution since the Jurassic Period.
"There were many large or medium-sized flying insects around at that time on which it would have fed indiscriminately," Selden said.
In Modern golden orb-weavers species , females are typically much larger than males . This new fossil was a female, suggesting this trend stretches back at laest as far as the Middle Jurassic , Selden said ... that is , back before the first known bird , Archaeopteryx , or giant dinosaurs such as Brachiosaurus and Diplodocus.
Although this is the largest fossil spider known to date , it is not the oldest . Two species from Cosely, England , Eocteniza silvicola and Protocteniza britannica , both come from about 310 million years ago.
Selden and his colleagues are now investigating other fossil spiders from China , "as well as those from elsewhere in the world ... currently Brazil , New Zealand , Australia , Italy and Korea," he said.
Jesus, I hate spiders. Just to think of that such a large beast existed gives me the creeps...
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