Arachnophobes, look away now! World's biggest spiderweb is discovered – and it contains more than 111,000 creepy crawlies

  • Reading time:4 min(s) read

  • READ MORE:  Britain’s most dangerous spider goes on a biting spree

If you’re not keen on spiders, look away now.

Experts have unearthed the world’s largest web that’s home to more than 110,000 arachnids, creating a nightmare megacity deep within a cave.

The monumental structure stretches 106 square metres (1,140 square feet) along the wall of a narrow, low–ceilinged passage.

It is situated deep inside ‘Sulphur Cave’ on the Albanian–Greek border, around 50 metres (164 feet) from the cavern’s entrance.

The sprawling network of thousands of funnel–shaped webs is home to two species – Tegenaria domestica, also known as the domestic house spider, and Prinerigone vagans, a small, moisture–loving spider measuring just 3mm in length.

Their giant web is strikingly similar to that of the lair of Shelob – an enormous, mystical spider that features in the Lord of the Rings. Her home, a winding network of tunnels, is filled with thick, sticky webbing that catches her prey.

‘The natural world still holds countless surprises for us,’ lead author István Urák, an associate professor of biology at Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania in Romania, told Live Science.

‘If I were to attempt to put into words all the emotions that surged through me [when I saw the web], I would highlight admiration, respect and gratitude.’

The enormous spider web deep inside Sulphur Cave is home to a mixed colony of two different species

The enormous spider web deep inside Sulphur Cave is home to a mixed colony of two different species

The monumental structure stretches 106 square metres (1,140 square feet) along the wall of a narrow, low-ceilinged passage

The monumental structure stretches 106 square metres (1,140 square feet) along the wall of a narrow, low–ceilinged passage

The domestic house spider weaves funnel-shaped webs which have joined together to create a megacity

The domestic house spider weaves funnel–shaped webs which have joined together to create a megacity

The massive colony marks the first documented case of communal behaviour in two spider species.

Researchers estimate around 69,000 domestic house spiders and more than 42,000 P. vagans are sharing the same sprawling structure.

The web is so heavy that, at certain points, it may ‘detach from the wall under its own weight’.

‘We report the discovery and detailed analysis of an extraordinary spider assemblage in Sulphur Cave,’ they wrote in the journal Subterranean Biology.

They suggest that the cave’s unique sulphur–rich environment may have encouraged the two species to cluster together in record–breaking numbers.

Scientists would normally expect domestic house spiders to prey on their smaller neighbours, but the lack of light in the cave may impair their vision, the team said.

Instead, they appear to feast on non–biting midges which also call the dark cave their home.

Further analysis revealed the spiders living inside the cave are genetically different to their counterparts living outside, indicating they have adapted to their unique surroundings.

A male (left) and female (right) Prinerigone vagans, a tiny spider who also call the huge web home

A male (left) and female (right) Prinerigone vagans, a tiny spider who also call the huge web home

Their giant web is strikingly similar to that of the lair of Shelob – an enormous, mystical spider that features in the Lord of the Rings

Their giant web is strikingly similar to that of the lair of Shelob – an enormous, mystical spider that features in the Lord of the Rings 

Read More

South American SPIDER arrives in the UK: Egg sac from venomous arachnid hitches a ride on a bunch of Aldi bananas

article image

‘Often, we think we know a species completely, that we understand everything about it, yet unexpected discoveries can still occur,’ Dr Urák added.

‘Some species exhibit remarkable genetic plasticity, which typically becomes apparent only under extreme conditions.

‘Such conditions can elicit behaviours that are not observed under ‘normal’ circumstances.’

Concluding their study, the researchers wrote: ‘Sulfur Cave in the Vromoner Canyon located on the border between Greece and Albania contains exceptionally abundant and diverse invertebrate communities that thrive in total darkness.’

ARACHNOPHOBIA IS IN OUR DNA

Recent research has claimed that a fear of spiders is a survival trait written into our DNA.

Dating back hundreds of thousands of years, the instinct to avoid arachnids developed as an evolutionary response to a dangerous threat, the academics suggest.

It could mean that arachnophobia, one of the most crippling of phobias, represents a finely tuned survival instinct.

And it could date back to early human evolution in Africa, where spiders with very strong venom have existed millions of years ago.

Study leader Joshua New, of Columbia University in New York, said: ‘A number of spider species with potent, vertebrate specific venoms populated Africa long before hominoids and have co-existed there for tens of millions of years.

‘Humans were at perennial, unpredictable and significant risk of encountering highly venomous spiders in their ancestral environments.’




img2025