The Joro spider is spreading in the US, but it's not the invasive species we have to worry about

A large, brightly colored invasive species called the Joro spider is on the move in the United States. Populations have been growing in parts of the South and East Coast for years, and many researchers think it's only a matter of time before they spread to much of the continental U.S.

But spider experts say we shouldn’t be too worried about them.

"My sense is people like the weird and fantastic and potentially dangerous," said David Nelsen, a professor of biology at Southern Adventist University who has studied the growing range of Joro spiders. "This is one of those things that sort of checks all the boxes for public hysteria."

LARGEST MALE SPECIMEN OF WORLD'S MOST VENOMOUS SPIDER DISCOVERED IN AUSTRALIA

Scientists instead worry about the growing prevalence of invasive species that can do damage to our crops and trees — a problem made worse by global trade and climate change, which is making local environmental conditions more comfortable for pests that previously couldn't survive frigid winters.

"I think this is one of those ‘canary in the coal mine’ type species where it’s showy, it's getting a lot of attention," said Hannah Burrack, professor and chair of the entomology department at Michigan State University. But the shy critter poses little risk to humans. Instead, Burrack said, introduced pests like fruit flies and tree borers can do more damage.

"This is a global concern, because it makes all the things that we do in terms of conservation, in terms of agricultural production, in terms of human health, harder to manage," she said.

The Joro spider is one of a group of spiders called orb-weavers, named for their wheel-shaped webs. They're native to East Asia, have bright yellow and black coloring and can grow as long as three inches when their legs are fully extended.

However, they’re pretty hard to spot at this time of year because they’re still early in their life cycle, only about the size of a grain of rice. A trained eye can spot their softball-sized webs on a front porch, or their gossamer threads of golden silk blanketing the grass. Adults are most commonly seen in August and September.

Scientists are still trying to figure that out, said David Coyle, an assistant professor at Clemson University who worked with Nelsen on a study on the Joro's range, published last November. Their central population is primarily in Atlanta but expanding to the Carolinas and southeastern Tennessee. A satellite population has taken hold in Baltimore over the last two years, Coyle said.

As for when the species will become more prevalent in the Northeast, an eventual outcome suggested by their research? "Maybe this year, maybe a decade, we really don’t know," he said. "They’re probably not going to get that far in a single year. It’s going to take a bunch of incremental steps."

The babies can: using a tactic called "ballooning," young Joro spiders can use their webs to harness the winds and electromagnetic currents of the Earth to travel relatively long distances. But you won't see fully-grown Joro spiders taking flight.

Joro spiders will eat whatever lands in their web, which mainly ends up being insects. That could mean they'll compete with native spiders for food, but it might not all be bad — a Joro's daily catch could also feed native bird species, something Andy Davis, a research scientist at the University of Georgia, has personally documented.

As for some observers' hope that Joro spiders could gobble up the invasive spotted lanternflies destroying trees on the East Coast? They might eat a few, but there's "zero chance" they'll make a dent in the population, Coyle said.

Joro spiders have venom like all spiders, but they aren't deadly or even medically relevant to humans, Nelsen said. At worst, a Joro bite might itch or cause an allergic reaction. But the shy creatures tend to stay out of humans' way.

What could one day truly cause damage to humans is the widespread introduction of other creatures like the emerald ash borer or a fruit fly called the spotted wing drosophila that threaten the natural resources we rely upon.

"I try to stay scientifically objective about it. And that’s a way to protect myself from maybe the sadness of it. But there’s so much ecological damage being done all over the world for, for so many reasons, mostly because of humans," Davis said. "This to me is just one more example of mankind's influence on the environment."

Video goes viral of Democrats, media members doubting Hunter Biden laptop

Video showing members of the media, intelligence officials, and prominent Democrats calling the Hunter Biden laptop story "Russian disinformation" went viral on Wednesday after an FBI official confirmed the laptop was real and belonged to the president's son during his Delaware criminal trial. 

The viral video featured former Chief of State at the CIA and Department of Defense, Jeremy Bash, told MSNBC at the time that it "looked like Russian intelligence" and "walked like Russian intelligence."

"This effort by Rudy Giuliani and the New York Post and Steve Bannon to cook up supposed dirt on Joe Biden looks like a classic, Russian playbook disinformation campaign," Bash said. 

"So when the intelligence committee goes in and warns Donald Trump that Rudy Giuliani is being worked over by Russian intelligence, and Rudy Giuliani suddenly comes forward with these mysteriously created emails, probably hacked through a Russian intelligence operations, we have to acknowledge the fact that the President of the United States is supporting, is condoning, is welcoming a Russian intelligence operation in 2020," he added 

BIDEN'S CLAIMS THAT HUNTER LAPTOP WAS ‘RUSSIAN DISINFORMATION’ DEBUNKED BY HIS OWN SON

"This is collusion in plain site," he continued. 

"There are 50 former national intelligence folks who said that what he's accusing me of is a Russian plant," President Biden said of the laptop during a 2020 debate with Donald Trump, referring to a story Politico published at the time on the letter signed by members of the intelligence community.

"Five former heads of the CIA, both parties, say what he's saying is a bunch of garbage. Nobody believes it except his good friend Rudy Giuliani," the president continued.

The New York Post first reported the contents of Hunter Biden's laptop in 2020, roughly a month before the presidential election. The story was widely dismissed as Twitter and Facebook limited user ability to share the story. 

Eric O'Neill, a security strategist, told CBS News at the time that it looked like a "classic disinformation campaign," and said the Russians were likely the ones behind the laptop, according to the video of several intel officials and liberal media hosts.

John O'Brennan, one of the fifty who signed the letter, said at the time that it did "bear the hallmarks of Russian disinformation." 

Rep Raja Krishnamoorthi, D-Ill., responding to NBC's Hallie Jackson, who said the Post's story at the time was "highly questionable" and "dubiously sourced," argued that Rudy Giuliani was a "vehicle for Russian disinformation," and suggested anyone claiming there was no evidence of it didn't make any sense. 

MSNBC host Ari Melber conceded that the network wasn't covering the laptop because of "journalistic reasons," and said they would never air dubious misinformation. 

NEW YORK TIMES FINALLY CONFIRMS HUNTER BIDEN'S LAPTOP AFTER DISMISSING IT AMID 2020 CAMPAIGN

Several media pundits pushed a report by the Washington Post that claimed Russians were feeding Giuliani misinformation to pass on to Trump. 

CNN's Wolf Blitzer and Alex Marquadt said at the time the laptop was likely part of Russia's latest interference in the U.S. election. 

"We do know it is a very active Russian campaign," Marquadt said, citing U.S. intelligence officials. 

James Clapper, a former director of National Intelligence, said on CNN at the time that the laptop was "classic, textbook Soviet, Russian trade craft at work." 

"The Russians have analyzed the target, they understand that the president and his enablers crave dirt on Vice President Biden, whether its real or contrived, it doesn't matter to them. And so all of a sudden, two and a half weeks before the election, this laptop appears, somehow, and the emails without any metadata, it's all very curious," he said.

FROM 'SMEAR CAMPAIGN' TO 'RUSSIAN DISINFORMATION,' LIBERAL MEDIA TEAMED UP TO DISMISS HUNTER BIDEN STORY

"We start this hour with the tale of international espionage connected to a close confidante of the President of the United States," MSNBC's Ali Velshi said on Oct. 17, 2020. "The president [Donald Trump] was reportedly warned that his personal attorney, former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani was the target of a Russian intelligence operation, a story that is unraveling to reveal allegations of disinformation, dirty tricks and a federal probe over Russian efforts to disparage Joe Biden."

Former Biden campaign advisor Symone Sanders, who now hosts a weekend show on MSNBC, appeared on the network in 2020 and bluntly stated that any attempts by then-President Trump to amplify the story would be viewed as "Russian misinformation."

Fox News' Nikolas Lanum contributed to this report.

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