“…Between 1982 and the present day, I along with numerous coauthors have conducted experiments and censused field colonies of A. urichi to determine the extent of their silk coverings and number of occupants (Edgerly, 1987a(Edgerly, ,b, 1994, types of trees that support them (Edgerly, 1987c), environmental correlates that predict their presence and abundance (Shenoy et al, 2020), cost of spinning silk (Edgerly et al, 2006), how they spin (Edgerly et al, 2002(Edgerly et al, , 2020Büsse et al, 2015Büsse et al, , 2019McMillan et al, 2016), as well as attributes of their silk and how it acts as waterproofing (Osborn Popp et al, 2016;Stokes et al, 2018;Shenoy et al, 2020;Harper et al, 2021). Related to the occurrence of non-kin groups, the first question posed for my Ph.D. work, under the guidance of the late George Eickwort of Cornell University, was basic: "what type of social behavior do webspinners exhibit?"…”