SPIDERS: A massive web draws worldwide attention... we'll explain...on Passport to Texas ____________________________________________________________ Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife Ask invertebrate biologist Mike Quinn how he spent his summer and he'll tell you... Since July twenty-fourth it has been living and breathing spiders. It's slowed down now, but for weeks after a giant spider web was discovered at Lake Tawakoni SP, east of Dallas, the media, public and scientific curiosity worldwide was insatiable -- with requests for information about the arachnids from the US to China. Quinn collected spider samples and took them to Texas A&M for identification. I turned them over to Alan Dean and John Jackman, resident spider experts. Alan identified the spiders that I had collected as falling into eleven families. The most common spider with the scientific name Tetragnatha guatemalensis, or the Guatemalan Long-jawed spider. Typically, spiders aren't social. So what would make nearly a million spiders put aside their differences to build several acres of web at Tawakoni? They usually don't get in that kind of density unless there's a whole lot of food available to them. Thanks to rains at the park, there was plenty to eat. A nearby pond served as an all-you-can eat buffet. The web buzzed with the sound of all these insects in there. And my understanding is that that [available food] probably induced the spiders to congregate in high density. Find more information about the giant web on the web, at passporttotexas.org. That's our show ... For Texas Parks and Wildlife ... I'm Cecilia Nasti.