Yamame reminds you to catch and release spiders instead of squashing them in your house. They will control the population of annoying insects!
>>1552925
https://www.livescience.com/55270-can-indoor-spiders-survive-outside.html
If the spider is a native to the area, it will likely be able to survive outside, Crawford said. But if the spider is a transplant that's become a house spider — even if its ancestors made the voyage to the "new" place decades to hundreds of years ago — odds are, the spider will perish outside, Crawford said.
That's because most spiders are adapted to specific places and temperatures, Crawford said.
"The American house spider (Parasteatoda tepidariorum) [is] probably native to northern South America," Crawford said. "It undoubtedly lives outdoors just fine if your backyard is in Brazil or Guyana."
This is now an ethical dilemma...
>>1552956
>"Most of the spiders you see in a house have indoor populations" — anywhere from 50 to several hundred, Crawford said.
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
No worries, my room's ceiling is entirely covered in cobwebs, I don't bother them at all.
>>1552969
Fun fact: cellar spiders are one of the few spiders (if not the only) to leave cobwebs. Other spiders can eat their webs but cellar spiders can't.