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Friday, August 21, 2015

GIANT SPIDER WEBS COVER ARGENTINIAN VILLAGES AND FIELDS only 15 km from Buenos Aires

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  • An army of spiders invaded the town after rainfall flooded a nearby area
  • They 'ballooned'  in on giant webs and immediately started adding more
  • It has now covered the ground, trees, street signs and even areas of water
  • Locals called it 'baba del diablo' which translates as 'slime of the devil' 

  • Locals say that the spiders came after recent heavy rains and they believe migrated into the town to escape flooding in the lower regions

    Continue reading and see additional images

    An entire town has been blanketed by a gooey layer of spider webs known locally as 'slime of the devil' that has even covered areas of water. 
     
    An entire town has been blanketed by a gooey layer of spider webs known locally as 'slime of the devil' that has even covered areas of water
    The blanket appeared after an army of spiders suddenly invaded the El Destino area, a collection of rural villages and hamlets which are some 10 miles from the city of Lezama in Argentina.
    The spiders use the threads to fly on the breeze and can travel several kilometres to safe ground in the process known as ballooning
    Locals say that the spiders came after recent heavy rains and they believe migrated into the town to escape flooding in the lower regions.


    The blanket appeared after an army of spiders suddenly invaded the El Destino area, a collection of rural villages and hamlets which are some 10 miles from the city of Lezama in Argentina
    Once there, they instantly started building webs adding to the threads already used by the spiders to parachute into the area.
     
    The spiders use the threads to fly on the breeze and can travel several kilometres to safe ground in the process known as ballooning.
     
    Some images shot by locals and posted online shows thousands of spiders which they say wove a dense fabric on trees, poles and traffic signs.

    Once there, they instantly started building webs adding to the threads already used by the spiders to parachute into the area

    The unusual sight is known as 'baba del diablo', which translates as 'slime of the devil'.
     
    Their arrival is a direct result of the rising flow of the river in the area due to the heavy rainfall over the last weeks, which has affected around 20,000 people and caused the evacuation of about 2,000.
     
    Local officials have said the spider webs are nothing to be worried about and that the spiders that made themselves are harmless.
     
    Locals however said it was never usually this bad and the last time there had been something similar had been in the 1980s when there was an invasion of other insects, but at a different time of year. 
    Source
     
     
    Read more interesting articles about insects
     and spiders on this blog
     
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