WASHINGTON 鈥 Just what the world needed: raining spiders.
It鈥檚 happening in Goulburn, Australia 鈥 of course it鈥檚 in Australia 鈥 where residents are reporting that spiders are raining from the sky, creating an effect that looks like 鈥渢his tunnel of webs going up for a couple of hundred meters into the sky,鈥 covering houses and 鈥 brace yourself 鈥 getting into their beards, .
One woman described sitting on her front veranda, watching what looked like silk threads 鈥渇loating through the sky.鈥 Sounds beautiful, except, you know 鈥 spiders.
The man with spiders in his beard exclaimed on Facebook, 鈥淪omeone call a scientist!鈥
Well, the Herald did. A naturalist from the Australian Museum calls it 鈥淎ngel Hair,鈥 and says it鈥檚 common 鈥 just not from thousands of spiders at once. A spider climbs up to a high point, releases some silk from its 鈥 well, its behind (so much for the beautiful silky effect) 鈥 and flies off on it. Such 鈥渂allooning鈥 flights can sometimes cover miles.
It鈥檚 rare for masses of spiders to do it all at the same time, though. 蜜桃视频app conditions probably have a lot to do with why so many did it in unison, a University of Akron biology professor tells .
Professor Todd Blackledge says there鈥檚 no danger to people 鈥 possible crop damage is almost certainly the worst thing that can really happen.
Sure. That鈥檚 what they always say in the first half-hour of the summer blockbuster disaster movie.