The adults of
T. montana appear in the open from May to September although the first to appear as early as February. Their main prey is
flies and
mosquitoes. If an insect flies into the web it is caught in the silk and the spider bites it injecting venom which liquifies the prey's internal organs. The spider then wraps the insect in silk like a parcel and stores it close to the web. The spider then repairs the web. When
T. montana is at rest, or when it is alarmed it adopts the distinctive elongated posture used by species within the genus
Tetragnatha, stretching their two pairs of front legs out beyond the head and the rear pair extending backwards. This together with their drab colouration and thin bodies, can be an effective camouflage. One study showed that mosquitoes formed over 60% of the food items of
T. montana specimens collected from webs in an alder forest in Poland, it was calculated that an individual consumes an average of 3.7 mosquitoes in a day, in the first half of the month of June with the amount of mosquitoes caught and eaten declining as the summer progressed. In Great Britain 13 out of 81
T. montana sampled showed evidence of having preyed on adult mosquitoes.
Reproduction Mating in
Tetragnatha montana is not initiated through courtship by the males, the male avoids being bitten by the female by locking her chelicerae in his own, using a spur and escapes after mating. Molecular markers (
allozymes) have been used to confirm that wild-collected females of
T. montana, mated with multiple males, indicating that sperm competition is potentially an important driver in the evolution of the species' mating system. The wasp is host specific and 19% of
T. montana in one population studied were parasitized, the parasitized spider builds a unique cocoon web which provides mechanical support for the wasp's pupal cocoon. The cocoon web consists of one reinforced main thread, often reinforced by a side thread, the wasp's cocoon is square and is fastened along the length of the main thread.
T. montana has also been recorded as a host for
Wolbachia bacteria which are reproductive parasites of many arthropods and nematodes. These parasites can influence the sex ratio of the host's progeny and in
T. montana were apparently more common in females than males. ==Distribution and habitat==