PermaTreat Pest and Termite Control
Free Inspections and Telephone Estimates
Ant Control
  • Home

    Welcome !

    Welcome! Family owned and operated since 1967. PermaTreat Pest Control...everthing your pest control company should be.

    Cross Browser Support

    W3C Compliant for Cross-Browser Support.

    Compatible Browsers

    • Internet Explorer
    • Firefox
    • Chrome
    • Safari
    • Smartphones
  • Pest Control

    Pest Control

    • Ant Control
    • Bed Bug Control
    • Commercial Services
    • Green Pest Control
    • Mosquito Control
    • Pest Identification
    • Residential Pest Control
    • Roaches and Asthma
    • Rodent Control
    • Stink Bugs
    • Wood Destroying Pests
    • Yard Guard

    Commonly Asked About

    Pest Identification Library

    Visit our new Pest Identification Library - find out which critter or bug is in your home or office, and what to do about it!
    Read more...

    Residential Pest Control

    PermaTreat offers a variety of Residential Pest Control programs, from Ants to Termites and regularly scheduled services.
    Read more...

    Commercial Pest Control

    PermaTreat has served the Commercial Pest Control needs of Federal, State, County and Local Government, Institutions, and Virginia Businesses and Non-Profits of all sizes since 1967.
    Read more...

  • Moisture Control
  • Home Improvement
  • Termites
  • Locations

    PermaTreat Office Locations

    • Charlottesville
    • Colonial Heights
    • Culpeper
    • Fredericksburg
    • Harrisonburg
    • Kilmarnock
    • Leesburg
    • Lexington
    • Manassas Park
    • Richmond
    • Tappahannock
    • Woodbridge

    Search for a PermaTreat office near you

    PermaTreat Locations

    Visit our Locations Page to search for an office near you!
    Search now...

  • Company

    Quicklinks

    • About Us
    • In The Community
    • Employment
    • Services
    • FAQ

    We thought you'd want to know...

    Pest Identification Library

    PermaTreat is hiring! If are you looking for an opportunity to join one of Virginia's premier pest control companies, we want to talk to you.
    Read more...

  • Contact Us

    Contact PermaTreat:

    Phone: 866-737-6287

    Send Us an eMail

     

    Contact Us Form

    Use our Contact Us Form!
    Contact Us Form...

    Customer Satisfaction Survey

    Use our Customer Satisfaction Survey Form!
    Customer Satisfaction...

    Request a Realtor WDI Report

    Use our Realtor WDI Request Form!
    Request WDI Report...

    Find us on social networks

    • Follow Us on TwitterTwitter
    • Friend Us on FacebookFacebook
Saturday May 25, 2013

Enter keywords or phrase.

Request an Inspection

Pest Identification Library

  • Pest Library Entrance
  • Pest Control Services
    • PermaTreat Locations
    • Commercial Pest Control
    • Residential Pest Control
  • Ants
    • Argentine Ant
    • Carpenter Ant
    • Odorous House Ant
    • Pavement Ant
    • Red Imported Fire Ant
  • Biting Insects
    • Bed Bug
    • Black Legged Deer Tick
    • Flea
    • Mosquito
  • Cockroaches
    • American Cockroach
    • Brown-banded Cockroach
    • German Cockroach
    • Oriental Cockroach
  • Flies
    • Cluster Fly
    • Drain Fly
    • Fruit Fly
    • Horse Fly
    • House Fly
  • Occasional Invaders
    • Box Elder Bug
    • Camel Cricket
    • Carpet Beetle
    • Centipede
    • Earwig
    • Field Cricket
    • Millipede
    • Silverfish
    • Stink Bugs
  • Pantry Pests
    • Confused and Red Flour Beetles
    • Indian Meal Moth
    • Larder Beetle
    • Mealworm Beetle
    • Saw Tooth Grain Beetle
  • Rodents
    • Bat
    • Black Rat and Roof Rat
    • Brown Rat
    • Gray Squirrel
    • House Mouse
  • Spiders

    • Spider Bites
    • Black Widow
    • Brown Recluse
    • Parson Spider
    • Wolf Spider
    • Yellow Sac Spider
  • Stinging Insects
    • Bumble Bee
    • European Hornet
    • Honey Bee
    • Paper Wasp
    • Yellowjacket
  • Wood Destroying Insects
    • Carpenter Ant
    • Carpenter Bee
    • Old House Borer
    • Powderpost Beetle
    • Subterranean Termite
    • Wood Borers
PermaTreat Pest Control BBB Business Review

Spiders

Getting Rid of Spiders Safely and Effectively is PermaTreat's Specialty.

Spiders are one type of creepy crawly critter that gets on lots of people's nerves. Most spiders are not dangerous, though, and in some situations they can actually be beneficial. In Virginia, there are thirteen different kinds of native spiders.

According to Virginia Tech entomology specialists, only two species of venomous spiders are known to exist in Virginia, and one of these is only rarely seen along the western fringes of the state. The black widow spider is the more common of the two and easily recognizable by most people for its distinctive coloration and markings. The other poisonous spider, the brown recluse, is more difficult to identify. Injuries attributed to brown recluse bites are more than likely because of other factors because of the extreme rarity of the species in Virginia.

Black Widow SpiderBrown Recluse SpiderParson SpiderWolf SpiderYellow Sac Spider

Spiders (order Araneae) are air-breathing arthropods that have eight legs, and chelicerae with fangs that inject venom. They are the largest order of arachnids and rank seventh in total species diversity among all other groups of organisms. Spiders are found worldwide on every continent except for Antarctica, and have become established in nearly every habitat with the exception of air and sea colonization. As of 2008, approximately 40,000 spider species, and 109 families have been recorded by taxonomists; however, there has been confusion within the scientific community as to how all these families should be classified, as evidenced by the over 20 different classifications that have been proposed since 1900.

Anatomically, spiders differ from other arthropods in that the usual body segments are fused into two tagmata, the cephalothorax and abdomen, and joined by a small, cylindrical pedicel. Unlike insects, spiders do not have antennae. In all except the most primitive group, the Mesothelae, spiders have the most centralized nervous systems of all arthropods, as all their ganglia are fused into one mass in the cephalothorax. Unlike most arthropods, spiders have no extensor muscles in their limbs and instead extend them by hydraulic pressure.

Print Coupon

Request a FREE Inspection -Pest Control

Learn More

Fossilized Spider in Amber
Fossilized Spider in Amber

Their abdomens bear appendages that have been modified into spinnerets that extrude silk from up to six types of silk glands within their abdomen. Spider webs vary widely in size, shape and the amount of sticky thread used. It now appears that the spiral orb web may be one of the earliest forms, and spiders that produce tangled cobwebs are more abundant and diverse than orb-web spiders. Spider-like arachnids with silk-producing spigots appear in the Devonian period about 386 million years ago, but these animals apparently lacked spinnerets. True spiders have been found in Carboniferous rocks from 318 to 299 million years ago, and are very similar to the most primitive surviving order, the Mesothelae. The main groups of modern spiders, Mygalomorphae and Araneomorphae, first appear in the Triassic period, before 200 million years ago.

Virtually all species are predators, mostly preying on insects and on other spiders, although a few large species also take birds and lizards. Spiders use a wide range of strategies to capture prey: trapping it in sticky webs, lassoing it with sticky bolas, mimicking the prey to avoid detection, or running it down. Most detect prey mainly by sensing vibrations, but the active hunters have acute vision, and hunters of the genus Portia show signs of intelligence in their choice of tactics and ability to develop new ones. Spiders' guts are too narrow to take solids, and they liquidize their food by flooding it with digestive enzymes and grinding it with the bases of their pedipalps, as they do not have true jaws.

Male spiders identify themselves by a variety of complex courtship rituals to avoid being eaten by the females. Males of most species will only survive a few matings, limited mainly by their short life spans. Females weave silk egg-cases, each of which may contain hundreds of eggs. Females of many species care for their young, for example by carrying them around or by sharing food with them. A minority of species are social, building communal webs that may house anywhere from a few to 50,000 individuals. Social behavior ranges from precarious toleration, as in the aggressive widow spiders, to co-operative hunting and food-sharing. Although most spiders live for at most two years, tarantulas and other mygalomorph spiders can live up to 25 years in captivity.

The best-known method of prey capture is by means of sticky webs. Varying placement of webs allows different species of spider to trap different insects in the same area, for example flat horizontal webs trap insects that fly up from vegetation underneath while flat vertical webs trap insects in horizontal flight. Web-building spiders have poor vision, but are extremely sensitive to vibrations.

Spiders Found in Virginia

Black Widow Spider Eating.JPG
brown recluse2
brown recluse size comparison coin
brown reclus bite hand
parson spider
spider bite 1
yellow-sac-coin
 

Click images to enlarge.

Information courtesy of Wikipedia and the National Pest Management Assn.

Copyright 2009 - 2013 PermaTreat Pest and Termite Control | Sitemap | Admin | Director | Webmail
Contact Us |  Powered by Front Wave Websites |  Graphics by Mielke Graphic Design |  Valid XHTML |  Valid CSS