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Stuff You Should Know

Short Stuff: Joro Spiders

Wed, 11 Dec 2024

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These invasive spiders are everywhere these days. But how did they get to the USA and are they harmful?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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0.209 - 25.394 Advertisement

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34.363 - 42.667 Josh

Hey, and welcome to the short stuff. I'm Josh. There's Chuck. There's Jerry there. And we're caught in a web of greatness because this is short stuff from stuff you should know.

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43.707 - 44.808 Chuck

Are you sure?

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44.828 - 49.61 Josh

Oh, my brain got zapped for a second there.

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52.251 - 61.175 Chuck

You know, I just saw a Joro spider today eating, either eating a bee or fighting a bee. I don't know what was going on, but it was tangling with a bee.

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61.935 - 63.236 Josh

Could have been two different steps.

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64.505 - 64.906 Chuck

Perhaps.

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65.827 - 81.984 Josh

I've seen a bunch of them myself. We have them all over the house. And I had been remarking to myself, like, wow, these things are all over the place. And you sent this and I was like, oh, well, that's why they're an invasive species here in Georgia. South Carolina for sure.

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82.565 - 101.002 Josh

And they're starting to move a little bit northwestward into other southern states like Tennessee and Alabama, but definitely up the eastern seaboard. And what we're talking about is what CNN called giant venomous Joro spiders are infiltrating parts of the U.S.,

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102.618 - 107.645 Chuck

Can you believe that? I mean, they're venomous, they're giant, and they are invading, but come on.

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108.366 - 115.415 Josh

Yeah. So after you guys hear this short stuff, you will realize how just preposterous that headline from CNN is.

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115.805 - 135.671 Chuck

Yeah, for sure. So the scientific name of these beautiful, beautiful spiders are Nephila clavata. And they are from East Asia. And they got over here like a lot of things get over here, which is in like shipping containers and stuff. A lot of times it's like lumber. That's how you get a lot of insects coming in.

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136.052 - 143.534 Chuck

And they came over from East Asia and really made a home here in the southeast since I think 2013 is when they first spotted them in Georgia.

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144.161 - 146.644 Josh

Yeah, Georgia leads the way in Juro spiders.

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146.944 - 148.586 Chuck

Yeah, Atlanta is the hub.

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149.547 - 151.949 Josh

Yeah, I think my house is the hub, actually.

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153.03 - 158.216 Chuck

Well, you're also seeing a lot of them now because the adults come out and spin their webs in August, September, October.

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159.117 - 185.149 Josh

So, like you said, they're from East Asia. And in Japan, they're called Juro gummo. And the reason I say Joro, a lot of people say Joro, which makes sense because it's spelled J-O-R-O. But in the Japanese spelling, there's a long symbol over the second O. So the first one would not be a hard O. It'd be J-O-R-O. Okay. That's right. And that means entangling or binding bride.

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185.189 - 204.433 Josh

And you'll see why they call them that. In Korea, they're called Mudang Gumi. Okay. which means shaman or fortune teller. So however you slice it, these things have pretty cool names and aptly so, because like you said, they're just absolutely beautiful and they are pretty good size enough so that you can see like all of them pretty clearly.

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205.051 - 226.145 Chuck

Yeah, I mean, they're big, they're orb weavers, so they're going to weave those big, beautiful webs that, I mean, their webs can be 10 feet wide. The one I almost walked into the other day, like face first, was probably about four feet wide and strung between two outdoor umbrellas that were not close to each other. So I don't know if that part counts as the width or not.

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226.286 - 247.451 Chuck

If that does, it was more like eight feet wide. But if you've seen these things and you said like, oh, that's just a garden spider. We have those when I was growing up. What are you talking about, guys? Not the same spider. The garden spider looks a lot like it, but there are some differences because they're, well, different spiders. Garden spiders, the females are bigger than the males.

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248.372 - 258.864 Chuck

And as far as the markings go, the garden spiders have yellow and black basically only. And the Joros have yellow and dark blue with a little bit of red on their belly.

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259.861 - 276.043 Josh

Yeah, they also have orange bands like around their legs. They're just really, really pretty. The males of the gyrospiders, too, are smaller and they're kind of drab looking. So if you ever see a gyrospider and you're like, wow, that is a cool looking spider. It's a female every time.

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276.764 - 292.172 Josh

And then the other dead giveaway is if it's spinning a web, it's a female because only the females spin webs for gyrospiders. And you said you walked face first into or you almost walked face first into a web? Correct. Have you ever run into one?

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293.147 - 316.117 Chuck

Um, I mean, I've walked through some some spider webs in my day. Like you do that a lot when you're like backup backpacking because you don't see him on the trail. So that happens a lot. And here that like I walked through one earlier just kind of on my arms. But it wasn't, you know, the nightmare scene where it's you realize it three inches from the spider being on your face kind of thing.

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316.929 - 335.096 Josh

Yeah. So one of the things that's characteristic of gyrospider webs is they don't necessarily break. Like it takes a lot to just walk through them. Like you can walk through them and you're kind of going to bounce off a little bit. It's not, you know, not going to send you flying backwards, but it's not just going to snap as you walk through it.

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335.576 - 347.721 Josh

And I saw that those webs are so strong, birds can perch on them. Like it's not like the bird's getting caught in the web, but they can like Just perch on the web for a little while while they figure out where to fly next.

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348.241 - 349.762 Josh

That's a strong spider web.

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350.223 - 357.627 Chuck

That is. Is that a good time for a break? I think so. All right. We'll take a break and we'll be right back after I go take a quick shower.

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from the Delta Sky Club to the jet bridge. Delta Airlines relies on 5G solutions from T-Mobile for business to power operations and serve customers faster. Together, we're putting 5G into the hands of ground staff so they can better assist on-the-go travelers with real-time information throughout the airport. This is elevating customer experience.

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401.027 - 424.976 Josh

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425.156 - 429.658 Josh

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Just like the number of stars in the sky, there is so much stuff you should know.

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443.743 - 465.714 Josh

So one of the reasons that gerospiders are spreading so quickly is because they're very new. Like you said, a little over 10 years since they were first spotted in the U.S., which means that predators haven't, I guess, spotted them yet. So they have a ready supply of flying insects. They apparently particularly like stink bugs.

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467.435 - 493.187 Josh

And little competition for those insects, in part, I think, because they weave their web higher than other spiders that they would be competing with for food. And so an ample supply of food and no predators means that any species is going to just boom for a while. And that's what we're in. We're in the golden age of gyrospiders booming all over the eastern United States.

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493.487 - 518.284 Chuck

That's right. And if you think, you know, how far north are they going to get right now? And I read an article, I think, from June 24 that said West Virginia is about as far north as they've gone so far, except for a satellite population in Baltimore. So they, I guess, got on a container, went to Baltimore, and were like, this isn't so bad.

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518.304 - 538.99 Chuck

I think one of the things we didn't mention that, you know, since they're so native to Georgia especially, or not native, I guess, but invaded in Georgia first, the University of Georgia has done a lot of studying on them. And they found that it turns out these guys can live in a lot colder weather than they previously thought they could. So they'll be to you soon, New Jersey, New York, and beyond.

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539.642 - 563.692 Josh

Yeah. So a little bit more about the actual spiders themselves and how they behave. You'll notice like there's a couple of different webs basically right up on each other. Gyrospiders live very close together. I guess they're not super territorial, if at all. And again, if you see a beautiful spider in the web, it's a female. And there's probably a male trying to get to her.

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564.332 - 573.117 Josh

And he's using all sorts of cute little tricks to make his way from one place to another toward his intended love target.

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574.237 - 575.718 Chuck

Oh, man, you almost said lover. Yeah.

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576.981 - 581.984 Josh

I would not say that. I get so deeply disturbed by that word for some reason. Oh, me too.

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582.245 - 590.111 Chuck

I think a lot of people have that reaction. There's something. And not only that, but the phrase, take a lover, it's just like. Yes. It's so gross to me.

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590.511 - 593.513 Josh

Oh, my God. That and moist. And if you put them together.

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594.234 - 600.038 Chuck

Oh, goodness me. You need some of that. Eye bleach. Studio 54 joke.

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601.039 - 603.621 Josh

Yeah. We need that. Wipe clean rubber. Yeah.

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604.902 - 624.157 Chuck

Oh, goodness. How did this get so dirty all of a sudden? All right. So they live close to each other. The males are trying to get the attention. They may float on little cobwebby type things and just be like, hey, look over here. And the reason they don't just jump up in a web and say, let's get this thing over with. is because the female will probably kill the male and eat it.

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624.998 - 641.165 Chuck

So they're walking a very fine line trying to get some attention without being eaten. So the University of Georgia professor said, you know, a lot of times, like while the female is eating something, they might just walk up and say, hey, are you enjoying that? What do you think of me?

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643.226 - 657.687 Josh

They apparently also the males will like fly float on the air. With a little bit of gossamer, like a little parachute or a hang glider from like tree to tree or branch to branch, making their way toward a web, which is pretty cute if you ask me.

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658.308 - 662.775 Chuck

But, my friend, should people be killing these things because they're invasive?

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664.156 - 689.629 Josh

No, you shouldn't. For one thing, it's not entirely clear what kind of impact they're having on the ecosystems they move into, but there's certainly no apocalyptic impacts going on because everything seems to be fine and the other spider populations don't seem to be shrinking as the gyrospiders move in. That's a really bizarre thing if that's true, if they're having like no weird impact.

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690.149 - 695.536 Josh

But again, they expect that they're going to start being predated on. That's harder to say than you'd think.

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696.316 - 714.896 Josh

Pretty soon. So we shouldn't have much to worry about. And I hope this isn't one of those podcasts that ages like milk, you know? Yeah. But yes, I'm hoping that all the entomologists are right where they're like, just relax, everybody. They're poisonous or they're venomous and they will bite you under certain circumstances.

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715.256 - 725.767 Josh

But if you leave them alone or even if you walk into their web, more often than not, they're going to run away from you. So to answer your question in a very long roundabout way, no, you should not kill them.

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726.315 - 741.386 Chuck

No. I think they're basically saying, hey, there's plenty of stink bugs, so that's fine. It's not like they're killing off the honeybees. And if they do bite you, you might get a little local reaction, but it's not the kind of venom that's going to do any kind of harm to you, really.

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742.026 - 760.426 Josh

No. And this article likened it to a bee sting. And I remember Yumi getting bitten by one of these. And I asked her, I was like, was it like a bee sting? She's like, no, it wasn't nearly as bad. Yeah. So I decided that wasn't a dramatic enough story. So I was going to tell everybody that her hand blew up like a cabbage patch doll. Yeah.

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760.806 - 762.287 Chuck

She got bitten by one, huh? How'd that happen?

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763.408 - 776.495 Josh

She was gardening and they are all over our yard. They got in like one of her rose bushes while she was deadheading her roses. And yeah, she got too close and it went, and that was that.

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777.195 - 778.556 Chuck

I'm going to get you me some gardening gloves.

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779.537 - 781.418 Josh

Oh, she's got some, but sure. Give her some more.

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781.438 - 785.26 Chuck

You should reach into all the hidey holes with those things on.

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786.394 - 800.841 Josh

Yeah, for sure. Especially those heavy-duty ones. You got anything else? I don't think so. No, I feel like we covered everything, Chuck. You know what that means. Mm-hmm. Short Stuff is out.

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