In Situ Science podcast: Giant spiders, motherhood and lazy journalism with Lizzy Lowe
Is there anything good about that spider in the corner of my room? – The Guardian
9 nifty things to know about spiders – University of Sydney news and opinion
Bringing biodiversity back to the ‘burbs – The Conversation
- The science show interview with Robyn Williams
- Radio interview on BBC World Radio
- 5 spider myths busted! Livescience
- City spiders are fitter and more fertile Sydney Morning Herald
- City living makes spiders big, fat and fertile, researchers say Los Angeles Times
- Cities are breeding bigger spiders, say scientists, but that’s definitely a good thing The Independent
- City spiders bigger than country cousins ABC Science Online
- Spiders grow bigger in the city Sky News Australia
- Bright lights, big spiders: Researchers say city life is breeding giant arachnids Daily Mail
- Some Spiders Grow Bigger in Urban Areas Discovery News
- Scared of spiders? They grow bigger in the city Telegraph.co.uk
- Cities Are Making Spiders Grow Bigger and Multiply Faster Wired
- Swelling Australian cities harbour ever bigger spiders New Scientist
- Australian Study: Our Hot, Bright Cities Are Spawning Gigantic Spiders Gizmodo Australia
- City spiders bigger, more fertile than those that live in the country CBS News
- City spiders bigger, more fertile than rural counterparts: Study Tech Times
- Spiders, Sex and the City Viral Global News
- Spiders grow bigger when they live in cities Tech Times
- City spiders grow bigger and faster than country cousins Wired.co.uk
- The Urban Environment Is Creating Super-Sized Spiders CityLab
- City spiders getting bigger New Zealand Herald
- Friendly Neighborhood Spiders Get Bigger in Cities Smithsonian
- Even the Spiders Are Bigger in the City Newsweek
- Orb-weaving spiders in urban areas are larger than spiders in less developed regions Australian Geographic
- Spiders ‘do better’ in cities BBC News
- Urbanization making Spiders Bigger Nature World News
- Orb-weaving spiders living in urban areas may be larger Eureka! Science News