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			          Australian Funnel-web Spider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
			           
 Atracinae, commonly known as Australian funnel-web spiders, is a subfamily of spiders in the funnel-web spider family Hexathelidae. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_funnel-web_spider
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			          Sydney Funnel-web Spider - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
			           
 The Sydney funnel-web spider is a species of Australian funnel-web spider usually found within a 100 km radius of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_funnel-web_spider
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			          Funnel-web Spider - Arachnid - Britannica
			           
 Funnel-web spider (family Dipluridae), family of spiders in the order Araneida that are named for their funnel-shaped webs. Their webs open wide at the mouth of the tube, and the spider sits in the narrow funnel waiting for prey to contact the web. http://www.britannica.com/animal/funnel-web-spider
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			          Funnel-Web Spiders: Bites & Other Facts - Livescience
			           
 Funnel-web spiders build funnels out of their webs. Some of these spiders are among the most venomous in the world. http://www.livescience.com/41515-funnel-web-spiders.html
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			          3 Ways to Identify a Funnel Spider - wikiHow
			           
 How to Identify a Funnel Spider. Funnel spiders (Agelenidae) consist of about 700 species that are found world-wide, particularly in moist climates and forests. http://www.wikihow.com/Identify-a-Funnel-Spider
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			          Funnel-web Fangs - National Geographic Education
			           
 An Australian spider sinks its chelicerae in. http://education.nationalgeographic.org/media/funnel-web-fangs/
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			          BioKIDS - Funnel-Web Spider Information
			           
 Funnel-web spiders are medium-sized (adults 8-12 mm long), usually brown and gray, with banded legs and spots on their back. http://www.biokids.umich.edu/critters/Agelenidae/
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			          Funnelweb Spiders - Spiderzrule
			           
 The Sydney Funnel-web Spider is believed to be limited to an area of about 160 kilometres from the centre of Sydney. http://www.spiderzrule.com/spider3.htm
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			          Funnel Web Spiders - Facts, Prevention & Spider Control
			           
 The funnel weaver spiders in the family Agelenidae, which are found in the United States, are often confused with funnelweb spiders that are found in Australia. http://www.orkin.com/other/spiders/funnelweb-spiders/
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			          Funnel-Web Spiders - AnimalCorner
			           
 Funnel Web Spiders are some of the worlds most deadly spiders and are found in coastal and mountain regions of eastern and southern Australia. https://animalcorner.co.uk/animals/funnel-web-spider/
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			          Funnel Web Spiders - Missouri Department of Conservation
			           
 The unique web of funnel web spiders is more often noticed than the spider itself. It is sheetlike, usually positioned horizontally, with a funnel leading downward to a shelter (a rock crevice or dense vegetation) where the spider hides, waiting for prey. http://mdc.mo.gov/discover-nature/field-guide/funnel-web-spiders