Saturday, January 31, 2015

Eight Legged Freaks!

This semester I'm taking Insect Ecology.  Our first assignment was to watch a movie or read a story about giant insects and then write about why that scenario is biologically impossible.  I had a hard time choosing a movie since most giant bug movies are found in the "Horror" section and I don't watch scary movies.  But then I came across this little gem, Eight Legged Freaks.  It was not scary at all... a little gross at times, but not scary.  If you're into cheesy movies about giant spiders, this one is for you!  If you're not, then you can just read my assessment below.  It summarizes the movie and explains why you never need to worry about giant spiders.  Enjoy!
-A :-)


2002 was an amazing year.  The Patriots won the super bowl, Michael Jackson dangled his small son over the edge of a balcony, the Enron scandal was just heating up, we were rocking out to Usher, Jennifer Lopez, and Eminem, and we were cheering for our favorite winter Olympic athletes in Salt Lake City.  But really, what should stand out the most to all of us looking back on 2002, is the fact that this was the year that Warner Brothers came out with its arachno-classic, Eight Legged Freaks, starring David Arquette and a young Scarlett Johansson.  Set in the Arizona desert town of Prosperity, this film is an epic story chronicling the result of dangerous chemicals falling off a truck to contaminate a pond ironically close to an exotic spider farm.  The cause of the chemical spill was, of all things, a small rabbit in the road.  The result of the spill?  “Spider steroids,” crickets that were collected from the pond and subsequently fed to around 200 exotic spiders, causing them to grow unusually large in very short amounts of time.

First off, this movie deserves some scientific props.  A good variety of spiders were included, and their external morphology seemed pretty accurate.  Eight legs, two body segments, diognostic eye patterns for different groups, silk coming out of spinnerettes at the posterior end of the spiders, and sexual dimorphism were obvious throughout the movie. The tarantulas were appropriately attacking folks using their fangs in a parallel up-down motion charactaeristic of the mygalomorphs (as opposed to a scissor motion that the more common araneomorphs would use).  The orb weavers were subduing their prey in silken cocoons before externally digesting them using gastric enzymes then ingesting them with their sucking stomachs.  It’s good that most of the spiders were night hunters since the dark exoskeletons plus the large surface area exposed to the sun’s radiation would heat those spiders up pretty quickly.  With such small surface area to volume ratios, it would be easy for the spiders to absorb and retain heat, and difficult for them to lose heat, possibly reaching a lethal temperature threshold, which would kill the spiders, if they hunted by day.

 Now let’s talk about why we never truly need to worry about a giant spider attack.  First of all, there’s the exoskeleton.  There is no way that an arachnid exoskeleton would be able to support a body the size of a small car.  If, by some miracle, it could, the spiders would have to be very slow and clumsy, dragging all that weight around.  They would not be able to so agilely jump over boulders, cars, and buildings, and travel a city block in one great leap.  The jumping ability of the giant spiders is in and of itself is an issue as well.  Sure, small spiders and other insects can jump very far distances compared to their body sizes, but when you’re that tiny, the forces at work on you are very different from what we humans are used to.  Gravity has very little effect, and smaller intermolecular forces are much more important.  Once the spiders’ size is scaled up, gravity is going to have a much different effect on the body, making the leaping spiders in the movie impossible.  In addition to less interaction with gravity, normal-sized hunting spiders have specialized hairs on their legs called scopulae, that help them adhere to surfaces like walls, ceilings, buildings, people, etc. Again, when the spider gets scaled up to such a great size, the scopulae are no longer going to be sufficient for gripping vertical surfaces without falling.  So the giant spider climbing up the man’s back and up and down all sorts of walls and buildings is just impossible.

 Most spiders respire through structures called book lungs, a series of membranes that together actually look like pages of a book.  Oxygen enters the spider’s body through these membranes.  Multiple thin membranes like this are great for increasing surface area for the diffusion of gases, but this increased surface area presents a danger of desiccation.  This is one of the main reasons that many spiders are nocturnal, and stay in their burrows during the heat of the day.  However, even though most of the “eight legged freaks” of the movie restricted their hunting to nighttime, the book lungs of spiders the size of cars would have to be incredibly huge.  With that much surface area exposed to air, especially air in the arid Arizona desert, these giant spiders should have died from desiccation very early on. 

But let’s say that there was some mechanism that prevented the spiders’ lungs from drying out.  There is still the issue of an open circulatory system that relies on diffusion for gas exchange.  Spiders, like insects, do not have the complex heart/blood vessel circulatory system that humans are familiar with.  Their “blood” is hemolymph, and it fills the body cavities without the restriction of blood vessels.  (The hemolymph was depicted in the movie as a nasty green goo that exploded out of the spiders when they were shot… an accurate enough depiction, I guess.)  This hemolymph bathes the internal structures of the spider, transporting nutrients, wastes, and gases.  There are some muscular contractions that can facilitate a type of hemolymph “flow” around the body, but all the molecules within the hemolymph get moved around passively via diffusion.  It would be impossible for a spider as large as the ones in this movie to establish a concentration gradient efficient enough to properly nourish and oxygenate all the body tissues.  Without efficient oxygen and nutrient delivery and waste removal, the spider’s tissues (including organs and muscles) would stop functioning, most likely have some debilitating muscle cramps, and the spider would die.

 Did you know that spiders do not have extensor muscles in their legs?  It’s true!  A spider’s ability to extend and move its legs depends solely on hemolymph pressure.  That is why when spiders die, their legs almost always curl up so tightly around their bodies.  I can’t imagine the amount of hemolymph pressure that would be necessary to move the giant legs of the spiders that attacked the town of Prosperity.  There really is no way a sufficient amount of pressure would be able to be generated in a spider’s open circulatory system.

 It was realistic for the citizens of Prosperity to be finding some molted exoskeleton pieces around town, but they really should have found a whole lot more of those discarded exoskeletons.  Spiders, like other arthropods, are unable to grow without shedding the confines of their current exoskeleton.  Typically, a spider like a tarantula will molt around ten times as it grows from an immature to an adult.  Each time the spider molts, a newly formed exoskeleton that was formed below the current one is exposed.  Each new exoskeleton expands to accommodate the spider’s growing body size before hardening.  If the spiders depicted in the movie really grew from normal size to super-sized in just a few weeks, there had to have been an unbelievable number of molts!  Exoskeletons and pieces of exoskeletons should have filled up that mine and littered the streets.

 One final point on why this movie is unrealistic doesn’t have to do with the size of the spiders; it has to do with their life habits.  Most spider species are cannibalistic.  If you were to have multiple spiders for pets, you’d need to have separate cages for them unless you want to come home one day to find out that Billy the Spider had eaten Tommy the Spider.  This is why spiderlings disperse after emerging from their eggs, often using the wind and a bit of silk from their spinnerettes to up to 100 km.  If they didn’t do this, siblings would pretty quickly start eating each other.  Thus, the vision of a giant pack of spiders hunting the humans in this movie is pretty silly.  Especially since the spiders were of multiple species.  Sure, the humans maybe seemed like “easy” prey, especially after most of the small pets in town had already been consumed, but instead of trying to break through doors and walls and mall gates to chase the humans, real spiders probably would have started eating each other.


Eight Legged Freaks had classic happy ending, the guy got the girl, the town listened to the kid, the sketchy mayor’s mall blew up, and gold was once again discovered in the mines of Prosperity (despite the fact that the mines exploded at the end of the movie).  However, if the gold boom doesn’t last, and no one thinks to capture, sell, and use the natural gas filling the mine shafts, the people of Prosperity have another option—collect and sell the spider silk that was left all over town!  The silk of a normal spider is said to be strong enough to catch and stop a 747 jet mid-air. Bioengineering research is currently underway to use spider silk to make fabrics for things like bullet-proof vests, cables, gloves and parachutes.   I would love the chance to be able to hold and manipulate the silk of such giant spiders, and a material that strong in such vast amounts has to be worth a lot of money to someone… certainly enough money to allow the citizens of Prosperity to continue to thrive in their small town. 

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The difference between utility and utility plus beauty is the difference between telephone wires and the spider web.- Edwin Way Teale