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'No need to be afraid' of 'venomous flying spiders,' expert says

Fox News Digital spoke with three spider experts who said that while the invasive venomous Joro spider may seem scary, this spider is really more of a nuisance than a threat to humans or pets.

Reports of "venomous flying spiders" poised to invade the United States may seem scary to some, but multiple spider experts told Fox News Digital this week that, while there's cause for concern, there is no threat to humans or pets.

The Joro spider, an invasive species originally from Asia, was first officially sighted in the United States about 10 years ago, Dr. David Nelsen, a professor in the Biology and Allied Health Department at Southern Adventist University in Tennessee, said in a phone interview. 

Nelsen published a research paper on the spread of Joro spiders in 2023. 

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"I think that we should be worried, because it's invasive, and they look like they're having an effect on the ecosystem," Nelsen said. 

Yet in terms of the safety of humans, pets and property, these spiders do not pose much, if any, of a threat at all, he said. 

"They're more of a nuisance than anything," Nelsen said. "They're going to decorate your house with webs. They tend to like to aggregate together in these large communities. And that can bother people."  

Their large size — their legs can grow up to 4 inches — can be unsettling for people who do not like spiders, he added. 

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"But as far as venom is concerned, you're not hearing reports from China and Korea about envenomations and risk," Nelsen said. "They're really not aggressive spiders."

Joro spiders "look more scary than they actually are," Allan Bossel, operations expert at Florida-based Bed Bug Exterminator, told Fox News Digital. 

"They definitely are big, and they can catch all kinds of things in your yard, like flies and wasps, but also bees and butterflies," said Bossel, who specializes in general insect control, according to the company's website. 

While the Joro spiders, like the vast majority of spider species, have venom glands, that venom does not pose a danger to humans or pets, Bossel said.

"That venom is for their prey and doesn't really harm people or pets," he said. 

Joro spiders are "incredibly docile," Dr. David R. Coyle, an assistant professor at Clemson University in South Carolina, told Fox News Digital in an email. He's published research on Joro spiders. 

"I've handled dozens of them (and my kids have handled them) with absolutely zero ill effects," he said. 

What's more, it is not even certain that the "mouthparts" of a Joro spider can even break human skin, he said. 

"In my opinion, there's no need to be afraid of them," Coyle said.

"That said," he continued, "arachnophobia is a thing and some folks may have a genuine fear of Joro spiders (and other spiders, for that matter)."

Orb weaver spiders, like Joro spiders, are also "extremely unlikely" to be found indoors, Bossel said.

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Today, Joro spiders can be found throughout much of the southern U.S.; there is also said to be a "satellite" population in Baltimore. 

It is unclear how these spiders made their way to the U.S., but Nelsen suspects an egg sac hitched a ride on a shipping container. 

Their population is, however, likely to continue growing and spreading across the country. 

"They look like they can spread pretty wide across the United States, especially in the East," Nelsen said. "I think we've kind of lost the war at this point, in terms of stopping it altogether." 

Coyle concurred, but added that the timeline of the spiders' journey northward was still very unclear.

"While our research shows they can likely survive in the Northeast, they aren't there yet (outside of a small population near Baltimore)," he said. 

"We have no idea whatsoever if or when they’ll make it up there," noted Coyle. 

Still, humans can — and should — do what they can to prevent their spread. 

"There's the tried-and-true method of ‘squash,’" Nelsen told Fox News Digital. 

"Certainly, the average citizen, if you see [a Joro spider], you can kill it," he said. 

Coyle agreed, telling Fox News Digital that the arachnids are "soft-bodied and relatively easy to either move or dispatch, should the homeowner choose to do so." 

Part of the reason the spiders have been able to establish a population in the U.S. is due to their "live-fast, die-free" lifestyle, Nelsen said.

"They grow really, really quickly, they reproduce, and then the female lays an egg sac and basically dies," he said. 

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The spiders themselves do not survive the winter, but the egg sacs can and do, he said. 

"They're kind of cryptic, so they're hard to spot," Nelsen said. "The best way to eradicate them would be to target egg sacs." 

As for reports that the spiders are "flying," Nelsen said that is "kind of misleading." 

Joro spiders, like many spider species, "disperse by ballooning," he said. 

This means they cast a thread into the air that is picked up by air currents. 

However, this happens when the spiders are very small, not in their full-grown adult size. 

"They're not dispersing as these really large adults," Nelsen said. "They're dispersing as these tiny millimeter-sized spiders, as basically fresh babies."

When the spiders land, they will then grow to their adult size. 

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"You're never going to see a ginormous spider fly in and smack you in the face, or something like that," he said. 

"These are tiny little spiders that you wouldn't even know. This is happening all the time."

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