Here we have a cluster of animals that are breeding, obviously. All these males on top are accessory males. This one here is probably attached. If we go like this — she's actually laying eggs now — and if we dig down here and pull her up and you'll see how the male is attached right here with his claspers, right on the rear of the abdomen or opisthosoma. The male's attached right there with these claspers, which the male has and the female lacks. And that, of course, is how he attaches to the female, and the harder she pulls, of course, the more this locks into the shell.