Scientists in Romania may have uncovered every arachnophobe’s worst nightmare after stumbling upon what they describe as the “world’s biggest spider web.” The discovery, published in the journal Subterranean
Biology, and the video of the find. has gone viral for its sheer scale and density.
Researchers said the colossal web was home to around 111,000 spiders, mostly from two rival species that seemed to coexist peacefully. According to LiveScience, which first reported the finding, the web stretched along the walls of a tight, low-roofed tunnel deep inside a sulfur-rich cave, in a permanently dark zone close to the cavern’s mouth.
The sprawling colony consisted of thousands of interconnected funnel webs, which the researchers likened to a “silky tent city.” They believe it could be the largest spider web ever recorded.
In a 20-second video of the discovery, one of the researchers is seen touching the web, which appears as a thick, pale mass clinging to the cave wall. The ripple caused by his touch becomes visible under the glow of his headlamp, showing the web’s scale and thickness.
The cavern housing the web is situated at 1,140 feet on the border between Greece and Albania.
Living inside this giant spider city were two kinds of spiders: the barn funnel weaver, also known as the domestic house spider, and another species called the sheet or dwarf weaver.
What amazed scientists most was that these spiders, which usually live alone and even fight each other, were somehow sharing the same enormous web peacefully, something never seen before.
“You have to experience it to truly know what it feels like,” said head author István Urák, an associate professor of biology at Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania in Romania, while speaking to LiveScience.
“If I were to attempt to put into words all the emotions that surged through me when I saw the web, I would highlight admiration, respect and gratitude,” he added.


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