They're beautifully color and almost artful looking that's for sure. However that moment passes pretty quickly when the fact that these big spiders jump and fly so to speak.

Eeeeek! I know I'd scream at near horror movie level if I saw one. Spiders, in general creep us out and the bigger they are the scarier they are. At the moment, it looks like their target is New York and New Jersey for now after already invading the Southeastern states up into the Mid-Atlantic.

They're called Joro spiders and according to Time Magazine, these native East Asian spiders have slowly been jumping and flying their way up the eastern seaboard toward the Northeast expected to start appearing any time this summer.

LizMinkertJohnson
LizMinkertJohnson
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Yes, they're venomous and yes they're bite you if they feel threatened, however according to the Gothamist website, their venom isn't dangerous to us humans at all rather it's more about seeing a spider with a four-inch body and six to eight inch legs.

The Joro spider can be beneficial to humans because it eats mosquitoes, yellowjackets, stink bugs, and even spotted lanternflies, which it catches in its golden yellow webs. Joro spiders themselves are also a food source for birds and mammals.

The Joro spider has actually been in the United States since 2010 according to TMZ, most likely arriving via shipping containers from Asia. While Georgia was their first state, they've since made their way into Florida, the Carolinas, Alabama, Mississippi, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio, and Maryland.

They use wind current to travel according to the Gothamist which is why they're referred to as flying and jumping spiders.

The spiderlings do balloon, which is like a parachuting style of producing silk that goes out into a long strand, which is then picked up by the wind.  The prevailing winds are moving north at this time of year, when spiderlings are the right size to travel in the wind.

Being that the wind can carry them up to 100 miles at a time, I wonder if they're make it across state lines into Connecticut and the rest of New England? I mean it's not like they know what states lines are.

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