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Yellow Garden Spider spinning web in the garden - keep your garden clear of spiders with City Termite & Pest Control in Malvern, AR

Yellow Garden Spider

Actual Size: ¾ to 1.1”

Characteristics: The female abdomen is black with symmetrical patches of bright yellow. The males exhibit smaller body sizes, brownish legs, and a reduced amount of yellow coloring.

Legs: 8

Habitat: Prefer habitats characterized by sunlight and vegetation, such as gardens, parks, and wetlands. They will also build their elaborate webs on the eaves of houses and buildings.

Habits:

  • Construct large orb-shaped webs, which can measure up to 2 feet in diameter.
  • Feed primarily on flying insects that become ensnared in their webs.
  • Their presence benefits landscape and garden plants rather than causing harm.
  • Considered harmless to humans.


Yellow Garden Spiders in Central Arkansas

Yellow garden spiders construct their webs in open sunny areas near plants where they stay concealed and protected from the wind. Their unique web design features a zigzagging X-shaped called a “stabilimentum.” These spiders rebuild their webs nightly, anchoring them to nearby structures, in gardens, parks, and wetlands. They devour any captured prey that doesn’t break free from the web. The females will consume and replace the sticky strands of the web come nightfall.

Yellow Garden Spider Habitat

Inhabiting a range of landscapes, the yellow garden spider favors locations near the edges of bodies of water, grassy hillsides, and woodlands. These spiders thrive in human-altered landscapes, such as roadsides, farms, and gardens. They also like to inhabit the eaves of houses, buildings, and tall vegetation, ensuring a secure foundation for their orb-shaped webs.

Yellow Garden Spider Behaviors, Threats, or Dangers

Despite their potentially startling appearance, these spiders pose little threat and will typically quickly escape rather than confront when provoked. Their venom, while harmless to humans, will incapacitate prey such as flies, bees, and other airborne insects ensnared in their webs. As natural carnivores, spiders contribute positively to ecosystems by controlling pest populations, benefiting landscapes and garden vegetation.

If you are dealing with excess yellow garden spiders, contact your local spider exterminators.