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::stage Egg:: After mating, the female snake stores the sperms in the oviduct for about 1 - 2 months. The female then produces large eggs, which after releasing from the ovary are fertilized by the sperms from the oviduct. The female snake lays the fertilized eggs (about 10 - 15 in number) in shallow holes or under the rocks. The outer covering of snake's egg is not hard, rather it resembles a soft leather. The female snake guards and looks after the eggs till they hatch into young ones. ::stage Young Snake:: Some snake species warm the eggs by twitching their muscles, so as to speed up the hatching process. The juvenile snake comes out of the egg, by biting the egg cover with the help of egg tooth. Until then, the snake obtains nutrition from the egg yolk. A young snake is known as a snakelet. A just hatched one can be called a hatchling. Baby snakes feed on small reptiles and rodents. A young snake may shed its skin upto 4 times a year. ::stage Adult Snake:: After the juvenile snakes emerge, they attain maturity within 2 - 4 years. One of the major distinguishing features between a young snake and an older snake is the frequency of molting per year. In case of a juvenile snake, skin shedding takes place about four times a year, whereas an adult snake sheds only once a year, at the most, two times per year. However, unlike insects in which molting allows the growth of the organism, renewal of skin in snakes does not have a significant role in their growth. | 8 times many times per year will a mature snake shed their skin. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Eggs sacs do female spiders lay their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg case do female spiders lay their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Eggs sacs is the name of the special case where female spiders lay eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg case is the name of the special case where female spiders lay eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Eggs sacs thing or things will female spiders deposit their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg case thing or things will female spiders deposit their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until their first molt long do spiderlings usually stay in the egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until the mother spider tells them to come out long do spiderlings usually stay in the egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until until their first molt will spiderling remain in the egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until until the mother spider tells them to come out will spiderling remain in the egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until their first molt amount of time will spiderlings most often stay during the egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until the mother spider tells them to come out amount of time will spiderlings most often stay during the egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | The exoskeleton is the hard outer casing of a spider called. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | The spiderling case is the hard outer casing of a spider called. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | a spider has a tough case on the outside named the exoskeleton. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | a spider has a tough case on the outside named the spiderling case. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | The exoskeleton name is given to a spider's outer casing. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | The spiderling case name is given to a spider's outer casing. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Ballooning is one way a spiderling leaves the nest. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Swimming is one way a spiderling leaves the nest. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Ballooning do spiderlings leave their nests. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Swimming do spiderlings leave their nests. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Ballooning thing is one way a spiderling leaves the nest. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Swimming thing is one way a spiderling leaves the nest. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | During adult phase do spiders lay eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | During spiderling phase do spiders lay eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Alongside adult phase will spiders deposit eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Alongside spiderling phase will spiders deposit eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A female spider lays eggs during adult stage. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A female spider lays eggs during spiderling stage. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac do spiders lay their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Web do spiders lay their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac thing or things will spiders deposit their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Web thing or things will spiders deposit their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac does a female spider lay her eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Web does a female spider lay her eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton type of skeleton does a spider have. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Internal skeleton type of skeleton does a spider have. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton do spiders have that keeps their body together like our skeletons. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Internal skeleton do spiders have that keeps their body together like our skeletons. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton kind of skeleton will a spider have. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Internal skeleton kind of skeleton will a spider have. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Ballooning do some spiderlings float around. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Wind do some spiderlings float around. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Ballooning do some spiderlings float from one place to another in the air. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Wind do some spiderlings float from one place to another in the air. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In ballooning way will some spiderlings float around. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In wind way will some spiderlings float around. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Normally 1 to 1000 many eggs are there in a spider egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Normally 5000 many eggs are there in a spider egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Normally 1 to 1000 amount of eggs are there in a spider egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Normally 5000 amount of eggs are there in a spider egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spider may lay 1 to 1000 number of eggs inside an egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spider may lay 5000 number of eggs inside an egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Do spiders live with their parentsno | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Do spiders live with their parentsyes | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Do spiders remain with their parents after hatchingno | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Do spiders remain with their parents after hatchingyes | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Will little baby spiders remain with their parental unitsno | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Will little baby spiders remain with their parental unitsyes | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac is the case called that spiders lay their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Force field is the case called that spiders lay their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac thing is the case named that spiders deposit their eggs in. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Force field thing is the case named that spiders deposit their eggs in. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spider lays its eggs in egg sac specially named case. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spider lays its eggs in force field specially named case. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac do spiderlings leave after their first molt | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Tree do spiderlings leave after their first molt | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac does a spiderling have until after it molts for the first time. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Tree does a spiderling have until after it molts for the first time. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac thing or things will spiderlings leave following their first molt | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Tree thing or things will spiderlings leave following their first molt | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In adult life stage do spiders lay eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In spiderling life stage do spiders lay eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | During adult stage will spiders lay eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | During spiderling stage will spiders lay eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In adult existence phase will spiders deposit eggs. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In spiderling existence phase will spiders deposit eggs. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton is left behind from molting of a spider. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg is left behind from molting of a spider. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton remains after a spider molts. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg remains after a spider molts. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Exoskeleton thing is left behind out of molting of a spider. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg thing is left behind out of molting of a spider. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Adult spider does a spiderling look like a tiny version of. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac does a spiderling look like a tiny version of. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spiderling looks like a tiny adult spider. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | A spiderling looks like a tiny egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Adult spider thing or things will a spiderling look like a tiny version of. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sac thing or things will a spiderling look like a tiny version of. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sacs are spider eggs stored. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In the web are spider eggs stored. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Egg sacs does a spider lay eggs inside. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | In the web does a spider lay eggs inside. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | At egg sacs location are spider eggs stored. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | At in the web location are spider eggs stored. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until after their first molt long do spiderlings stay in the egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until they can catch their own food long do spiderlings stay in the egg sac. | not_entailment | lookup |
::stage Egg:: Female spiders lay their eggs in a special case called an egg sac. There may be only one egg or thousands of eggs in that egg sac, depending on the kind of spider. Egg sacs act like force fields, protecting them from being harmed and from animals and insects that want to snack on them. Some spider moms carry their egg sacs with them or nestle them into safe spaces that they can protect, the way your family cares for you. Other kinds of spider moms leave the egg sacs on their own and hope that they survive and hatch. ::stage Spiderling:: After the spiderlings hatch, they hang out inside the egg sac until they finish their first molt. Spiders don't have a skeleton like you do, but they have a hard, outer casing called an exoskeleton. Although spiders get bigger, their exoskeleton doesn't grow with them and gets too small, the way you outgrow your shoes. So spiders have to shed it, or molt. A new, bigger exoskeleton is underneath. It is soft at first but hardens up, protecting the spiderling, which looks like a tiny version of an adult spider. After the first molt, the spiderlings leave the egg sac and huddle together for a short time. Although you live with your family as you grow up, these spider siblings don't hang out together for very long. Some kinds of spiderlings just walk off and go their own way, but others have more creative ways to travel. Some spiderlings leave by bridging. Spiderlings hike up into the leaves of a tree and then drop down onto nearby branches using a silk strand like a zip line. Other spiderlings go on their way by ballooning. Spiderlings climb to a high point on a nearby plant and shoot out silk strands that catch the wind like a kite. Then the spider floats away as if it was being carried by helium balloons. Spiders may float for a few feet up to several miles. ::stage Adult Spider:: After the spiderlings molt several times, they become fully grown adult spiders, which look like bigger versions of the small spiderlings. Some adult spiders stop molting after they stop growing while others molt from time to time throughout their life. As adults, they lay eggs and start the spider life cycle all over again. | Until after their first molt amount of time will spiderlings stay during the egg sac. | entailment | lookup |
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