Yes. A number of different species of spider have claws as extensions of their tarsus. There are two-claw and three-claw arrangements, and some other variations on the theme.
no they don't have claws only one kind of monkey has sharp claws and that is the marmosets and howler monkeys have flat nails like people.
yes but they are not noticeable
no
All spiders have claws, just really really tiny claws on the edges of their feet. Spiders live basically everywhere, from burrows in the ground and webs in the trees to the dark corners of houses.
Spiders have claws at the end of each leg.
Spiders have claws at the end of each leg.
Spiders cannot get tangled and killed in their own webs. The reason is because they have movable claws on their feet that releases the web from their feet as they walk
Spiders have a head and an abdomen (belly). They have 8 legs and up to 8 eyes. Spiders have tiny hairs and claws on their legs that help them feel when a bug is in their web. The little claws also help to cut the silk when they are weaving their web. Spiders come in many colors, from clear to yellow to green to black. Female spiders are much bigger than male spiders. Females will live for about a year. (Daddy-Long-Legs are not spiders because they don't have a distinct head and a body. They just have one little circle with everything on it, and 8 legs sticking off. True insects, like ants, have three body parts: head, abdomen, and thorax [chest].)
I don't think they nice because articels say they can leave serious injuries caused by their claws.
No modern spiders have claws but there a number of spider kin that do. One of the best examples is the camel spider...it is not a true spider, just a close relative. See link. Their bite is painful but they are not particularly venomous.
Lyrebirds primarily eat invertebrates such as insects, spiders, beetles and worms (and sometimes seeds) which they scratch from the ground using their claws.
Spiders have a head and an abdomen (belly). They have 8 legs and up to 8 eyes. Spiders have tiny hairs and claws on their legs that help them feel when a bug is in their web. The little claws also help to cut the silk when they are weaving their web. Spiders come in many colors, from clear to yellow to green to black. Female spiders are much bigger than male spiders. Females will live for about a year. (Daddy-Long-Legs are not spiders because they don't have a distinct head and a body. They just have one little circle with everything on it, and 8 legs sticking off. True insects, like ants, have three body parts: head, abdomen, and thorax [chest].)
No. Fishing spiders are hunting spiders of the genus Dolomedes.
they do have claws because they use their shrap claws to open the body of their prey. they do have claws because they use their shrap claws to open the body of their prey.
I'm not sure what you mean by "combine," but if you mean to breed different spiders together and get some kind of hybrid that would combine all the characteristics, then the answer is no. For instance, some spiders have no eyes, some have one pair of eyes, some two, some three, and some four pairs of eyes. You would have to make a choice. Suppose that there were 5 species of spiders. Two had 2 eyes, another 4 eyes, another 6 eyes, and one had no eyes. Adding them all together you would have 14/5= 2.8 eyes for the hybrid spider. Some spiders have two claws per foot, and some have three claws on each foot. There is no compromise position between these two basic choices. There are so many different species of spiders that it would take an immense time period just to try to get them to mate. Most of the hybrids probably would not be capable of reproducing among themselves, and much less could they be manipulated to hybridize with other hybrids.