Why don’t spiders get stuck in their own webs?

While walking on their webs, spiders do not come in contact with the strands of their webs all at once. Their legs are covered with hundreds of little hair and they move lightly over their webs with just the tip of their hair of their legs. Additionally, a spider uses its claws to grip each thread, ensuring that it does not fall out of its own web. However, its prey such as flies, become entangled in the web because a large part of its body makes contact with the sticky threads, resulting in its entanglement and eventually death.

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