This website allows you to “play” with an interactive, realistic looking spider
The diving bell spider, Argyroneta aquatica, is the only species of spider known to live entirely under water. As with other spiders, it breathes air, which it traps in a bubble held by hairs on its abdomen and legs.
The beautiful and intricate abdomen of a ravine trapdoor spider. They are a burrowing spider, inhabiting sloping riverbanks and ravines in Georgia, Alabama, and Tennessee. The use their abdomen to block the entrance of their 7 to 15 cm deep vertical burrows when threatened, a phenomenon called phragmosis. (Source)
The Darwin’s bark spider has the toughest silk ever seen, more than twice as tough as any previously described silk, and more than 10 times stronger than Kevlar (a material used for bullet proof clothing).
The spider’s wheel-shaped orb webs could range up to 30 square feet (2.8 square meters) in size. They usually dangle over streams, rivers and small lakes up to 82 feet (25 meters) across. (Source)

The spider catches the bee and the bee stings the spider. Both are dead, with the bee’s stinger still in the spider. This is a great example showing why honey bees die after stinging something only once. Their stinger/venom sac are attached to other organs inside the bee, so when the stinger’s barbs lodge into something, everything gets pulled out, potentially including gut, etc and leaving a gaping hole in the bees abdomen. (From Here)