Yup, Black Widow egg cases ... inside each one are all the black widows you could ever want to see.
In my back porch renovation work, I had to demolish the old water damaged stoop. I actually did that step earlier, but had left a small pile of debris for later removal.
When I got back at it last week, the first thing I grabbed to move was a half plastic barrel that had been upside down.
This involved reaching under the edge to get a grip. As I did, the thought crossed my mind that I should have flipped it with a stick first, in case there was a widow under there.
By that time though, my fingers were already committed and I flipped the barrel to find ...
... this young lady about 10 inches from my fingers ... which was way TOO close for ANY spider (aaaaaaacckkkkk!), but especially this one.
Here is a topside view of my southern black widow spider ... just before she and her children were killed in an industrial accident.
I knew Florida had a brown widow spider, but did not realize that we actually have 4 species of widow spiders in the state ... 3 natives and one introduced species.
What the hell? Native outnumbering exotics? Can this be?
The Florida Department of Agriculture site says,
The Florida Department of Agriculture site says,
"Formerly, most bites by black widows (almost all by female spiders) occurred in outhouses, but presently, Latrodectus bites occur most frequently when the spider is trapped against human skin, either by reaching under objects where the spider is hiding or when putting on clothing, gloves or shoes containing the spider. Widow spiders are generally very timid and only bite in self-defense when they accidentally contact humans. "
Outhouses?
You picturing what I'm picturing?
Ouch.
Also,
" Bite symptoms are systemic, spreading through the lymphatic system, and usually start about 1-3 hours after the bite. The most common symptoms are intense pain, rigid abdominal muscles, muscle cramping, malaise, local sweating, nausea, vomiting, and hypertension. If left untreated, Latrodectus bite symptoms usually last 3-5 days. Calcium gluconate and/or antivenin may be administered to relieve or counteract symptoms."
So, it doesn't sound like most folks would die from the widow's bite, but for a few days, you might wish you had.
So, be careful out there and take a moment to safely check anything that's been stored for awhile.
Be especially careful on those trips to the outhouse.















