Essayer OR - Gratuit
Shape-Shifting Animals on an Inhospitable Planet
The Atlantic
|December 2021
Lizards’ feet are morphing, squid are shrinking, butterflies’ wings are growing stronger.
In June of this year, not long before the midwinter solstice, catastrophic floodwaters draining from the Gippsland Plain, in southeastern Australia, left in their wake an otherworldly phenomenon: Translucent spider silk, extending half a mile in some places, trailed over riverbanks, roadsides, and fields, rising into glistening spires atop highway signs and shrubbery. On once-humdrum stretches of road, drivers pulled over to stare, take pictures. When a breeze ran through the membrane, it rippled with the fluency of a tide surging in a mangrove swamp. Light trembled on the sodden turf beneath. How improbable that something so delicate, sensuous even, might remain after something so destructive.
To spot the creatures responsible, you would have had to draw close. Sheet web spiders—constellations of them—clustered in a cosmos of their own froth and protein. A mature sheetweb is rarely bigger than a contact lens; the spiderlings are best made out with a magnifying glass. On days of ordinary weather, millions live in the earth, but when threatened by inundation, the spiders abandon their belowground niches. Each fashions a single thread, a streamer, to function as an emergency airlift. Lofted up by atmospheric currents, and possibly by electrostatic crackle too, the spiders sail on the tips of their lines toward higher terrain, alighting, in time, on fence posts or treetops or ascending farther still. In 2011, a pilot reported crossing paths with clumps of spiders at 2,000 feet. In a departure from habit—wingless as they are—the sheetwebs fly. The tracers of their mass decampment, a strand of silk for every spider, settle on a scale so vast, so uniform, the result looks less like the work of animals than like something mythological or architectural: a mysterious Christo at work, festooning the landscape.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 2021 de The Atlantic.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Atlantic
The Atlantic
The Realist Magic of Philip Pullman
The Golden Compass author tells us how to love this world. It's not easy.
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
We Are Not One
When it came into view, Doctor Rustin was struck by its size.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE COMING ELECTION MAYHEM
Donald Trump's plans to throw the 2026 midterms into chaos are already under way.
22 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The One and Only Sammy
The astonishing, confounding career of Sammy Davis Jr.
7 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
GET A REAL FRIEND
The false promise of AI companionship
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
PRESIDENT FOR LIFE
Donald Trump is trying to amass the powers of a king.
10 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Last of the Literary Outdoorsmen
Thomas McGuane—fisherman, hunter, rancher, writer—says “good riddance” to his kind.
14 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
THE MISSING KAYAKER
What happened to Ryan Borowardı?
44 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
The Man Who Rescued Faulkner
How the critic Malcolm Cowley made American literature into its own great tradition
9 mins
December 2025
The Atlantic
Patti Smith's Lifetime of Reinvention
Nearing 80, the punk poet reflects on the twists in her story that have surprised even her.
12 mins
December 2025
Translate
Change font size

