Spider season has arrived – here’s why there are more than usual in your home

September is here – so it means thinking about the end of the summer, the beginning of colder air and the Halloween. But that means more spider. Or?
Nature experts announced why many British can see more spiders in their homes at this time of the year.
Spider Identity Specialist Stuart Hine said that people typically saw spiders in autumn, because many of the male species have reached adulthood and are looking for a woman to mate.
As a result, the “spider season iyle usually starts at the end of August and continues until mid -November.
Home spiders are most commonly male because they tend to search for a wife by entering windows, doors and drainage pipes.
Hot weather conditions may contribute to more spider views, because people tend to keep their doors and windows open for a longer period of time, which allows male spiders to enter.
“They’re not bigger and really more. We can say that we can say, because our air and windows and doors remain open, some large species entering our homes have more observations.”
According to Met Office, Britain broke the hottest spring this year this year and recorded for more than 50 years.
Mr. Hine explained that a warm and dry autumn is an ideal season for male spiders to find love, because they take longer to wander in a dry garage or ceiling instead of moving away from the rain.
“The most gentle thing that everyone can do is to leave them out. They are just looking for something and this is Lady Spider, H Hine added.
But Dr. David Gee is a zoological lecturer from Derby University Told to BBC This year, spiders have matured before and produced more offspring.
He said: “As a function of global warming – and we see that our environment has changed – you find more species, not just spiders, but actually insects and other species moving to the north.”
Meg Skinner from the British Arachnology Association Yahoo News Spiders in the UK “are not medically meaningful and do not represent a risk for humans, but some people may have allergic reactions to spider bite, such as a bee sting”.
In addition, people “spiders do not bite easily and only if they feel threatened like bees – for example, if we sit on them”.
The idea that Conkers kept spiders away from the house is a legend and refuted, Since there is not enough evidence to argue that horse chestnuts push spiders.
Spiders are not a threat to horse chestnuts, because they do not eat or lay eggs, and therefore the trees do not need to produce a chemical that details the spiders.




