- USDT(TRC-20)
- $0.0
To read the headlines, you would think the entire eastern seaboard is about to become the setting of a horror movie. âGiantâ spiders âthe size of a childâs handâ are âexpected to colonize the entire East Coast.â Theyâll use âtiny, terrifying parachutesâ to âdrop from the sky.â Oh, and theyâre venomous.
Go ahead, scream. Vow to never go outside again. Come back when youâre ready, and weâll talk about what these spidersâtheyâre called joro spiders, by the wayâare actually like. Spoiler: They don't really fly, they aren't that big, they haven't colonized the East Coast despite years of dire warnings, and they're not going to kill you. Let's start with that first one.
Technically yes, but they can't really hurt you.
Hereâs the thing: All spiders are venomous. What we call venom is their way of digesting food. Remember, spiders eat bugs and creatures smaller than themselves, and the venom is what they use to liquify and gulp down their preyâs insides. Thatâs pretty metal, but on a small scale. If you are larger than a housefly, you donât have much to worry about.
Some spiders do produce enough venom to cause their bites to be painful (or, in rare cases, deadly) to humans. But the joro is not one of them. Its fangs arenât usually even big enough to get through human skin. Youâll be fine. Or as the entomologists at the University of Georgia put it at JoroWatch: "From our experience collecting hundreds of these spiders, having them in our hair and wandering on our arms, and interacting with thousands of webs, they have not bit."
Reports have compared the spiderâs size to a childâs hand, or to an adultâs palm. Like, okay, but barely, and only if you measure their outstretched legs. These spiders are bigger than what youâre probably used to if you live in the northeast, but theyâre not tarantula-sized or anything,
The female's body is about an inch long; the male's body is less than half an inch. Hereâs a photo of a joro spider on a personâs hand (scroll down to the gray-haired lady in the red shirt who is holding it and smiling at it like it's an adorable baby). You have eaten jelly beans larger than this.
This is another exaggeration. The truth is that these guys, like many other spiders, can travel by âballooning.â This means they release a few strands of silk into the air and let the wind pick them up (this phenomenon was illustrated in the âadorableâ ending of Charlotteâs Web). They can float for miles if they catch the right breeze, which led to speculation in 2022 that a few of them might be able to make it as far as D.C. that year.
We donât actually know how far theyâll be able to travel, though, and thereâs no reason to believe theyâll be dropping from the sky all over the east coast. The 2022 fuss was sparked by a study from researchers at the University of Georgia, where they calculated that the joro spider should be able to withstand cold temperatures. A 2023 study calculated that much of the northeastern U.S. has habitats that the joro spider might like to live in, but there has been no mass migration.
Joro spiders, originally from Japan, have been living in Georgia since 2013. It's now 2024, and despite the dire warnings of 2022, these spiders still live in a small area of the south, mainly in parts of Georgia and neighboring states.
You can keep tabs on their expanding (or not) empire by checking this page on iNaturalist, where people can report sightings. There are no joro spiders on the map in New York, Philadelphia, New Jersey, or even Washington, D. C. There are a few sightings in Baltimore from September 2023. It's certainly possible the spiders live in areas where they haven't been reported yet, but there's no reason to expect them to parachute en masse into New York or other cities that are well outside their current range.
No, actually! Some invasive species can be problematic in their new environment. Lanternflies, for example, have âsquish on sightâ status where I live in Pennsylvania.
But joro spiders arenât expected to cause any significant damage or disruption. Theyâre just spiders, and they just want to eat bugs. They might actually be beneficial, since they can eat mosquitoes, stinkbugs, and other insects that are themselves problematic. One of the authors of the 2022 study told the press that âpeople should try to learn to live with them,â and that thereâs no need to kill a spider thatâs just trying to live its little spider life. I, for one, welcome our new stinkbug-eating overlords.
Full story here:
Go ahead, scream. Vow to never go outside again. Come back when youâre ready, and weâll talk about what these spidersâtheyâre called joro spiders, by the wayâare actually like. Spoiler: They don't really fly, they aren't that big, they haven't colonized the East Coast despite years of dire warnings, and they're not going to kill you. Let's start with that first one.
Are joro spiders venomous?
Technically yes, but they can't really hurt you.
Hereâs the thing: All spiders are venomous. What we call venom is their way of digesting food. Remember, spiders eat bugs and creatures smaller than themselves, and the venom is what they use to liquify and gulp down their preyâs insides. Thatâs pretty metal, but on a small scale. If you are larger than a housefly, you donât have much to worry about.
Some spiders do produce enough venom to cause their bites to be painful (or, in rare cases, deadly) to humans. But the joro is not one of them. Its fangs arenât usually even big enough to get through human skin. Youâll be fine. Or as the entomologists at the University of Georgia put it at JoroWatch: "From our experience collecting hundreds of these spiders, having them in our hair and wandering on our arms, and interacting with thousands of webs, they have not bit."
Are joro spiders actually as big as your hand?
Reports have compared the spiderâs size to a childâs hand, or to an adultâs palm. Like, okay, but barely, and only if you measure their outstretched legs. These spiders are bigger than what youâre probably used to if you live in the northeast, but theyâre not tarantula-sized or anything,
The female's body is about an inch long; the male's body is less than half an inch. Hereâs a photo of a joro spider on a personâs hand (scroll down to the gray-haired lady in the red shirt who is holding it and smiling at it like it's an adorable baby). You have eaten jelly beans larger than this.
Are joro spiders going to rain from the sky?
This is another exaggeration. The truth is that these guys, like many other spiders, can travel by âballooning.â This means they release a few strands of silk into the air and let the wind pick them up (this phenomenon was illustrated in the âadorableâ ending of Charlotteâs Web). They can float for miles if they catch the right breeze, which led to speculation in 2022 that a few of them might be able to make it as far as D.C. that year.
We donât actually know how far theyâll be able to travel, though, and thereâs no reason to believe theyâll be dropping from the sky all over the east coast. The 2022 fuss was sparked by a study from researchers at the University of Georgia, where they calculated that the joro spider should be able to withstand cold temperatures. A 2023 study calculated that much of the northeastern U.S. has habitats that the joro spider might like to live in, but there has been no mass migration.
Where do joro spiders live?
Joro spiders, originally from Japan, have been living in Georgia since 2013. It's now 2024, and despite the dire warnings of 2022, these spiders still live in a small area of the south, mainly in parts of Georgia and neighboring states.
You can keep tabs on their expanding (or not) empire by checking this page on iNaturalist, where people can report sightings. There are no joro spiders on the map in New York, Philadelphia, New Jersey, or even Washington, D. C. There are a few sightings in Baltimore from September 2023. It's certainly possible the spiders live in areas where they haven't been reported yet, but there's no reason to expect them to parachute en masse into New York or other cities that are well outside their current range.
Should you kill joro spiders?
No, actually! Some invasive species can be problematic in their new environment. Lanternflies, for example, have âsquish on sightâ status where I live in Pennsylvania.
But joro spiders arenât expected to cause any significant damage or disruption. Theyâre just spiders, and they just want to eat bugs. They might actually be beneficial, since they can eat mosquitoes, stinkbugs, and other insects that are themselves problematic. One of the authors of the 2022 study told the press that âpeople should try to learn to live with them,â and that thereâs no need to kill a spider thatâs just trying to live its little spider life. I, for one, welcome our new stinkbug-eating overlords.
Full story here: