
The web of an orb-weaving spider covered in matutinal drops of water is undoubtedly beautiful. But, is the web really covered in dew — as is claimed by a myriad of photo sites? Alas, this is something for which reason is unlikely to overcome glibness. After all, what could be more obvious: of course those droplets are dew — right?
Dew is not a generic name for water drops that appear early in the day. Actually, a number of processes can cause such drops: along with dew are drizzle, rain, guttation, and the collection of fog drops.
Dew results from temperature differences that increase with object size
When an object has a temperature lower than the dew-point temperature of the surrounding air, dew will form on it. A net loss of infrared radiation to the sky will drop an object’s temperature, but thermal conduction from the surrounding warmer air will counteract this. For a tiny object (a spider’s thread), conduction keeps the object at the same temperature as the air, and dew won’t form. For a larger object (a flower) the radiation loss will probably win, and dew will form.
Collection of fog drops is greatest with tiny objects
Yet, droplets sometimes appear on a spider’s web. As they don’t result from dew, how do they form? This is a question of how air flows around and past objects. A small object (spider’s thread) does not deviate airflow significantly, so drifting fog droplets just collide with, and are collected by, the object. A larger object (daisy) causes the air to flow around it, and this carries fog droplets around and past it, so their intersection is minimal.
Dew has formed on the sky-facing petals of this daisy. Net infrared radiation loss caused the petals to cool and dew to form. The flower is large enough to be able to sustain a temperature difference between itself and the surrounding air, so dew can form. (The daisy’s stem was protected by the flower from such radiation losses to the sky and so shows no dew.)

It is tempting to think that the same process of dew formation would have caused the formation of droplets on the spider’s web. Yet, the spider threads are so fine that thermal conduction guarantees that they will have the same temperature as the air. So, dew cannot form here. Yet, the tiny threads of the web intersect some of the drops of a steam fog drifting past. (A larger object would merely cause the airflow to be deviated and the drops to flow around them.) The result is that small objects (such as spider threads) intersect passing fog drops, but haven’t sustained the temperature difference that results in dew. Larger objects (such as the daisy) have a dew-producing temperature difference, but don’t intersect fog drops.

Once, while mentioning this behavioural difference during a presentation, I was asked why the drops on the spider’s web were often uniform in size and spacing (as shown in this older picture), despite having resulted from random impacts of fog droplets. I didn’t know the answer. But it turns out that it has to do with regularly spaced sticky balls of glue the spider attaches to the spiral threads so as to trap flying insects. These glue drops absorb the collected water drops and swell producing the both the regularity and the difference between the drops on the spiral and radial threads.

Species diversity
A year ago on Canada Day, I posted a collection of my favourite images from the previous decade, and said: “My two-dozen mute portraits offer peeks into the charm and beauty of life in Canada.” Commenting on it, Carlo said that it offered a “somewhat different view of our ‘population diversity’ than what is usually presented.” I liked that.
So, on a day when most people choose to celebrate themselves, I will celebrate a broader diversity with a collection of my favourite images recorded since last year’s July 1st. Some are permanent residents and some are migrants. (Note: No migrant was apprehended, harmed, or separated during these encounters.)
A Black Bear cub catches its first Kokanee salmon in a local creek.

A Northern Flicker chick welcomes its mummy bringing food.

A Mountain Bluebird dons a tutu.

A Grizzly Bear sow and her cub graze in a field.

A Golden Eagle scours the valley bottom for comestibles.

Snowshoe Hares were plentiful this last year.

A Great Blue Heron flies overhead.

Looking out from treeline talus, a Hoary Marmot guards his domain.

A Hooded Merganser swallows a sucker whole.

A Mallard demonstrates walking on water.

An Osprey flies by with a headless fish.

The Mule Deer is the only local animal that stots.

Two River Otters claim a dock as now belonging to them.

A Pika cries “eep”.

Common Redpolls scrounge seeds in the midwinter.

A male Ruffed Grouse is in full display.

A Red-winged Blackbird announces springtime.

This Wood Duck is confident that it is superior to all the rest of us.
