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Creature Feature
Egg Cases
Winter is only days away (December 22),
animals of all sorts are participating in
the next step of the life cycle; the
reproduction stage. A majority of animals
have their young emerge during the warmer
seasons, spring/summer, where food is more
plentiful. Insects, arachnids, and
gastropods lay eggs in the fall/winter
months to allow the next generation a better
opportunity to survive.
Egg cases come in all different shapes and
sizes as they relate to their species. Some
animals such as slugs lay eggs under moist
logs; praying mantises lay their egg case on
trees and arachnids leave their egg sac on
or near their web. Their purpose in life is
to produce the next generation, after they
succeed, they will die. Here are three
examples of egg cases and their young that
will hatch from them in the spring.
Praying Mantis
The egg case of the Praying Mantis is
composed of a frothy substance that
eventually hardens. Inside the egg case,
which is called an ootheca, the number of
eggs can range from 10-400 individuals. They
emerge from the mass once the temperature
warm up, usually in April. The praying
mantis then goes through 3 stages of
metamorphosis, egg, nymph, and adult.
Black and Yellow Garden Spider
After copulation the female produces an egg
sac that is only 25 mm in diameter but still
encompasses 400-1,400 eggs. The sac is
protected by the female in the center of the
web until she dies from the first frost. The
eggs hatch within the autumn months but they
stay within the sac until spring time; this
is called overwintering. During the winter
months, the spiderlings are protected within
the layers and layers of silk that was
produced by the female.
Slug
The small opaque eggs found under rocks and
logs come from the slimy slug. The mating
ritual of this organism is very unique
because they are hermaphroditic (has both
male and female reproductive organs). One
slug will follow and devour the mucous path
from the other slug. As they meet up, they
make a circle around each other to start the
reproduction process. After the completion
of copulation, it takes 8-10 days for eggs
to develop. Depending on the species, slugs
lay between 500-1,000 eggs in small batches
throughout the forest floor. They will hatch
out of their eggs once the warm season
arrives.

Chinese Praying Mantis (Tenodera aridifolia
sinensis)

Black and Yellow Garden Spider (Argiope
aurantia)

Slug (Family Limacidae)
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