No, the Camel spider (also know as a Sun Spider, Wind Spider and Winder Scorpion) is a member of the order Solifugae, and as such do not spin webs.
This order of spider also has no venom either. The camel spider is a nocturnal animal and hunts it's prey as if it were a scorpion, therefore there is no need for a web.
No but lars engen is! Mwuhahahah
They don't. They lay their eggs in sand. What you heard was a myth.
The camel spider injects venom into their prey that leaves them numb and unable to move. They then inject them with enzymes which digest their inner tissues, reducing it to liquid that the spider can then drink.
The llama is found in South America and "related" to camels.
If you're referring to the large spiders that supposedly crawl up into camels and lay their eggs, then no. If they do exist, they would be limited to the areas where camels live and manycountries have very cold areas where camels don't live, so they won't ever 'conquer the world'.
A camel has a spine, therefore, a camel is a vertebrate.
No. A camel is an animal, a physical object.
Llamas are cousins of camels. Alpacas gunacos and vicunas are also cousins.
Camel Spiders, or Solifugae, are capable of leaving a painful bite on a human. However, they are not venomous.
Because they don't need to store water on their backsLlamas live in the mountains and Camels live in the desert.Llamas & Camels are related, but they don't have humps on their back because Llamas and Camels used to be one species, but Llamas went to the mountains and Camels went to the desert.
No they aren't. Cave spiders and camel spiders belong to different taxonomical orders.
the camels in camel racing are robots.