Hurricanes can make spiders more aggressive, new research shows

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Tuesday, August 20, 2019
Spiders more aggressive in hurricane-prone areas
As if we needed another reason to hate hurricane season!

We don't need another reason to hate hurricane season, but it appears research is going to give us another one anyway.

According to a study published in the journal "Nature Ecology and Evolution," hurricanes can make spiders more aggressive.

SEE ALSO: Forecasters predict above-normal hurricane season, NOAA says

Researchers found that spiders that live in storm-prone areas such as the Gulf Coast and the East Coast can become far less docile after a major storm event.

MORE: Spider catches, eats bat in web outside Texas home

We now know what nightmares are made of: huge spiders eating bats!

The colonies aggressively pursue food and produce more egg cases. On top of that, their offspring have a better chance of surviving into early winter.

The team of researchers gathered their information by monitoring subtropical storm Alberto and hurricanes Florence and Michael during the 2018 hurricane season.

RELATED: 2019 hurricane season: This year's storm name list