These cocoons of Argiope are made late in the summer, and the young stay in them till the next season. Out of six hundred cocoons collected by Wilder in the spring, less than a quarter were entire, the rest being pierced, or torn in some way, by birds or insects; so that the spiders were saved the trouble of gnawing their way out, as they can if obliged to.
I once noticed a small Theridion gnawing at its soft cocoon, and found that one side had been made in this way much thinner than the rest of the cocoon. I put her, with the cocoon, in a bottle where I could watch her; and she soon commenced biting again, and kept it up the rest of the day. The following night the young came out.
Many spiders remain by their cocoons till the young come out; but other species, making similar ones, go away, or die, and the young get out themselves when they are old enough.
The young of Micaria cut a smooth round hole in their paper-like cocoon, just large enough for them to come out one by one.
PARASITES.
The eggs in the cocoon are very liable to be eaten by parasitic insects. Certain wingless Hymenoptera are always hunting around in the neighborhood of spiders’ nests, and may sometimes be seen trying to stick their ovipositor through a cocoon. If they succeed, their eggs hatch before the spiders, and eat the latter up. Other parasites lay eggs on the backs of young spiders, and the larva lives attached to the outside till it gets nearly as large as the spider itself.
GROWTH IN THE EGG.
The egg of a spider, like that of any other animal, is a cell which separates from the body of the female, and afterwards unites with one or more cells which have separated from the body of the male. This fertilization of the eggs probably takes place when they have reached their full size, and are about to be laid.
After the eggs are laid and hardened, it is very easy to watch their development. They grow just as well anywhere else as in the cocoon, and, in order to see through the shell, it is only necessary to cover the egg to be examined, with oil, alcohol, or any liquid that will wet it.