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‘Spiders have three life cycles’: The real science behind Spider-Man’s most unsettling trailer yet

'Spiders have three life cycles': The real science behind Spider-Man's most unsettling trailer yet

The real science behind Spider-Man’s most unsettling trailer yetThe real science behind Spider-Man’s most unsettling trailer yet

The new trailer for Brand New Day opens with a voice describing the three stages of a spider’s life and what happens in the spaces between them. The science, it turns out, is stranger than the fiction.When the first trailer for Spider-Man: Brand New Day dropped this week, Peter Parker is disoriented, waking in what appears to be a cocoon, struggling to control webbing that now seems to come from his body rather than the mechanical web-shooters he has used throughout his MCU run. The shift to organic webbing is not entirely new territory for the franchise; Tobey Maguire’s Spider-Man produced webs biologically in Sam Raimi’s 2004 film, and the concept was briefly acknowledged in No Way Home.

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Here it suggests something more unsettled ,a physical evolution possibly tied to DNA mutation or the cumulative strain of being Spider-Man, leaving Parker exposed in ways he has not been before. In the comics, such biological changes have occasionally taken far darker turns, with Parker growing additional limbs, developing a more predatory physiology, and losing pieces of his humanity in the process.

Tom Holland Spidey

Disoriented Peter Parker wakes inside a massive web cocoon after collapsing, teasing a mysterious and unsettling transformation ahead

The trailer suggests no such extremities, but the direction of travel is unmistakable. Over the footage, the voice of actor Keith David, whose role remains unknown, provides the narration that gives the trailer its spine: “Spiders have three life cycles. When between cycles, it can leave the spider vulnerable to threats. And for those spiders who make it through, it amounts to a kind of rebirth.” It is a neat piece of scriptwriting which signals a genuine arc for Holland’s Parker. It is also, in its broad strokes, accurate, and the reality of what spiders actually go through across those three stages is worth understanding on its own terms.

What the three stages actually are

Every spider that has ever existed, from the tiniest jumping spider to a tarantula the size of a dinner plate, moves through the same three phases: egg, spiderling, and adult. There is no larval or pupal stage in the way a butterfly has one. Spiders do not metamorphose. What they do instead is stranger in its own quieter way.

A female Nursery Web Spider, Pisaura mirabilis, carrying her egg sac.

A female Nursery Web Spider, Pisaura mirabilis, carrying her egg sac/ Youtube Steve Downer – Wildlife + Macro Cinematography

It begins in an egg sac, a structure the mother constructs from silk before she has even laid her eggs. The silk is tough enough to protect against the elements, and a single sac can hold anywhere from a handful of eggs to several thousand, depending on the species. Some mothers guard the sac until the eggs hatch. Wolf spider mothers carry it with them entirely, and when the eggs are ready, they bite the sac open themselves to free the young. Other species deposit the sac somewhere secure and leave their offspring entirely to chance. The eggs generally take a few weeks to hatch, though in colder climates some will overwinter inside the sac and emerge only in spring.

The most dangerous stage

When spiderlings hatch, they are not larvae or grubs. They are fully formed, miniature spiders, eight legs, multiple eyes, the complete architecture of an adult, compressed into something almost invisibly small. What they lack is size, and getting larger requires shedding the exoskeleton that constrains them, a process called moulting. Most species moult between five and ten times before reaching adulthood, and it is during the moult, when the old exoskeleton has been shed and the new one has not yet hardened, that a spider is at its most exposed. It cannot move properly. It cannot defend itself. The trailer’s line about vulnerability between cycles is, in biological terms, a reasonably faithful description of this window.

spiderlings

A jumping spider takes stock of her spiderlings/ Instagram Sanctaury Asia

Dispersal at this stage is one of the more quietly extraordinary things spiders do. Some spiderlings simply walk away from the egg sac. Others balloon, climbing to an elevated point, raising their abdomens, and releasing fine silk threads that catch the wind and lift them into the air, sometimes carrying them hundreds of metres, occasionally much further. The silk forms a triangular shape that functions essentially as a kite. It is how spiders colonise new environments, and it means that a creature hatched in one place may reach adulthood in another entirely.

Spider Testing the Wind with Ballooning Silk

Spider Testing the Wind with Ballooning Silk/ Image Credit: Steve Creek Wildlife Photography

Adulthood, and what it costs

Once a spider reaches adulthood, it is capable of reproducing, and for male spiders, that is frequently the end of the story. A male first spins a small web, deposits sperm onto it, and then draws that sperm into specialised appendages called pedipalps before going in search of a female. The approach requires care; females are larger, often stronger, and a male that misjudges the encounter may be mistaken for prey. Many males die shortly after mating, in some species as a matter of biological inevitability rather than female aggression, despite what popular assumption tends to hold. Female spiders live considerably longer. Most spider species survive one to two years in total, but female tarantulas are an outlier that makes a mockery of the average, some live beyond twenty years. They also continue moulting into adulthood, which creates a peculiarity: if a female tarantula moults after mating, she sheds the structure in which she stored the sperm, and must mate again. In Brand New Day, the filmmakers have used this biological framework as a metaphor for where Peter Parker finds himself, caught between one version of himself and whatever comes next, temporarily without his bearings. Whether the film earns that metaphor remains to be seen when it opens on 31 July. The spider it borrows from, at least, has biology on its side Go to Source

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