Food is digested outside the mouth (preorally). Some spiders chew their prey as they cover it with enzymes secreted by the digestive tract, whereas others bite the prey and pump digestive enzymes into it before sucking up the liquefied internal tissues.
The mouth leads into a narrow passage, the pharynx, which leads to a sucking stomach, which is part of the midgut. The midgut has a variable number (usually four pairs) of blind extensions, or ceca, that extend into the first segments of the legs (coxae). Additional ceca and a branched digestive gland are located at the front of the abdomen. At the end of the gut a cecum (stercoral pocket, or cloaca) connects with the hindgut before opening through the anus. |