Thursday, 10 November 2011

Xena's got bigger!

Moulting is always a fraught time for any spider keeper - the most common cause of death in pet tarantulas are bad moults. Spiders, like most arthropods have an exoskeleton so need to moult at least once a year to get bigger. It's a bit of a traumatic experience, tarantulas generally won't eat for a month or so when they're in pre-moult, they then flip on their back (they're not dead!) and then break out of their skin. For the next few days or even weeks they won't eat still, while their new exoskeleton hardens up.

For a Theraphosa blondi, the infamous Goliath bird-eating tarantula, moults are a particularly bad time for the spider keeper. There's always the chance that if something goes wrong you'll have to leap to the rescue of your beloved (and expensive) pet. Messing around with a very stressed and very large spider is not really something anyone would choose to do but it can sometimes be the only way to get a spider through a moult. Luckily for me, this time Xena was absolutely fine. This didn't stop her shedding a ridiculous amount of itchy hairs all across the house for the last 2 weeks - Mrs. Jim and I have been itching like crazy.

Still it was all worth it, because as you can see, Xena is getting to be a BIG girl.



She'll be starring at the last (boo!) Deadly Day Out in Avenham Park, Preston, this weekend!

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Deadly Days Out

Very exciting news to all of those keen to meet the bugs (and me) in the real world, I will be one of four animal encounter people working the Deadly Days Out tour this year. Events are held on Sundays, with last week's (my first) at Lydiard Park in Swindon. More details can be found on the BBC.

The Swindon day was great fun, with loads of live (and deadly) animals. Including this rather lovely Nile Crocodile that I am holding in my excellent bright yellow animal encounter hoodie. Wowing the crowds we had Xena (the Goliath Birdeater), Indiana (the Whip Scorpion), Marjorie (the Diapherodes gigantea stick insect) and a couple of hissing roaches called Mr. & Mrs. C.

I also got to meet the brilliant Jungle Jonathan and catch up again with Pete the Bugman as well as getting to say hello to the legendary Steve Backshall.

At this weekend in Glasgow the newest member of the Bug Explorers Bug House will almost certainly be making an appearance. Talulah, The Antilles Pink-Toe (Avicularia avicularia) as you can see below from the picture with Mrs. Jim, she's a gorgeous arboreal spider with lovely orangey-pink toes. Come say hello in Glasgow (or another Deadly Day Out soon)!

Sunday, 4 September 2011

The Wedding

I'm getting married!

Yes that's right, somebody wants to spend the rest of their life with not just me, but a whole house full of bugs... Hard to believe!

But as Mrs. Jim is just as keen on creepy crawlies I suppose it's not too much of a hardship, in fact we (honestly, both of us, not just me) want to make bugs part of the wedding. But how?

Idea #1 - Tarantula-based petting zoo for the wedding reception, downside: it may reduce the number of guests willing to come.

Idea #2 - insect based wedding outfits


Downside: prohibitive cost of bespoke mantis headdress

Idea #3 - Roast goliath birdeating tarantulas for the meal



Downside: Waaaaaah! Poor ickle spiders don't be so MEAN!

Idea #4 - Praying mantis table ornaments - now we're onto something!

So at our wedding the bugs will be dinner guests, but of the non-edible kind. Instead there will be a different species of mantis on each of the 12 tables, and the table itself will be named after the Latin name of the mantis. A perfect conversation piece during the meal!

Any suggestions for types of Mantis of other exciting bug-themed wedding ideas are welcome in the comments below.

Monday, 22 August 2011

The Mantis House

Having recently acquired 12 baby African giant mantises (Sphodromantis viridis) I came upon an interesting solution as to how to house them - my window sill. Our bedroom has an unusual double glazed window that is actually just two windows with the sill in the middle. A perfect sealed environment for some baby mantises:


I released 7 originally, and there are definitely 5 still with us, and they're getting fairly big.


This one is about the size of my fingernail, and although they are called giant mantises, they only actually grow to around 4 inches in length.

Mantises have a bit of a cannibalistic reputation but I've not seen any evidence of these juveniles attacking each other. It may just get a bit different when they reach adulthood - unless females are really well fed before meeting a male she might just bite his head off. Literally. Not that that prevents him from, erm, completing what he set out to accomplish as it were. One of the benefits of not having a brain, I suppose.

At the recent British Tarantula Society show in Coseley (see A Grand Day Out) somebody was recommending Miomantis caffra Saussure 'Johannesburg' as a great mantis to release in you house and replace spiders as the main insect predator - great to keep flies down in the kitchen. Maybe these guys might just do a similar job...




Saturday, 9 July 2011

The Deadly 40


Spider bites kill people. No really, they do. But then so do car crashes, heart attacks and narcotics. It's all a matter of stats, to really get a grip on what to be worried about then mathematics can be pretty useful*.

The main trouble with statistics is that most people, myself included, have a very limited grasp on how they work. This is something that Professor David Nutt, head of the UK's drug advisory body, discovered in 2009 when he quite correctly pointed out that you are as likely to be killed horse riding as you are taking ecstasy. Tabloid outrage ensued.

People die taking ecstasy, about 30 every year in the UK. They also die, riding horses, driving cars and yes, by being bitten by spiders. But how many people actually die from spider bites?

There are around 200 species of spider that are considered dangerous, and of those, a few (about 40) that are known to have a potentially** deadly bite. This is not many out of the 50,000 currently estimated species of spider in the world (Cesaretli & Ozkan 2010).

Of "The Deadly 40" (been watching the Deadly 60, at all? it's great!), nearly all are web-building Araneomorphs (often called 'true spiders') rather than the more primitive Mesothelae and Mygalomorphs. I mention this only because tarantulas, in the commonly thought of sense (big hairy spiders from South America) are all Mygalomorphs, and no tarantula could kill by biting a human (unless you happened to be very allergic to tarantula venom). So, for the record, tarantulas do not kill people. End of. Not that Mygalomorphs are all nice and friendly - Sydney funnel-web spiders, Atrax robustus, are Mygalomorphs and are pretty dangerous critters.

Grammostola rosea - a Mygalomorph spider, and not in any way deadly. Unless you're a cricket.

Anyway, of those deadly ones one of the most significant groups is the genus Latrodectus, or to most people, the widow spiders.

Black widows are the archetypal dangerous spider, but given the level of news coverage every time a 'deadly' black widow turns up in a truck in county Durham or in an imported car in Chatham docks, exactly how deadly are we talking? And what precisely is a black widow spider?

American widow spiders Latrodectus macrons, L. various and L. hesperus are the three species commonly referred to as black widows. The Australian red back (Latrodectus hasseltii) is a closely related but distinct species from the main three American black widows. All of these spiders have a potentially lethal bite, but the operative word is, of course, potentially.

Ricky Langley published a paper in 2005 in Wilderness and Environmental Medicine about animal-related fatalities based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The most deadly animal in America is… "Other specified" animals. A slightly disappointing grouping consisting on large animals such as bears, sharks, cows and horses. Of this, cows and horses are likely to have caused around 90% of the 846 deaths recorded in America between 1991 and 2001. Next up, hornets, bees and wasps with 533 deaths. Then dogs with 208 deaths. Spiders lie disappointingly in 5th place with 66 deaths recorded between 1991 and 2001. That's an average of just over 6 deaths cause by spider bites in the US per year.

Most of these deaths would have been caused or at least attributed to black widows. It was estimated by Jelinek (1997) that since the introduction of antivenin in the US around 1% of cases of black widow bites end in fatalities. Before, the figure was around 6%. Given 6.6 cases of fatality per year, and assuming that all spider bite fatalities are caused by black widows, this suggests that there are around 660 cases of black widow envenomation in the US annually. In a country containing over 300 million people you don't need to be a statistician to realise that the threat posed to you from a black widow spider is infinitesimally small.

In Australia, Jelinek estimates around 2000 L. hasseltii bites are recorded every year (there are likely to be more that are never reported) and the number of deaths annually from L. hasseltii is…. None. Nil. Nada. Zilch. Since the introduction of antivenin in 1956, nobody has died from the bite of a red back spider. Before then, there are only 13 recorded deaths ever.

Interestingly, the Latrodectus bite data shows a few unusual quirks. Firstly, in most countries you are more likely to be bitten or killed if you are male. Around 60% of cases of death in the US and bites in Australia were on males. You are also much more likely to die from a black widow bite in the US if you are white and aged between 20 and 64, going against the commonly healed view that most victims of spider bites are children.

That is not to say that the bites of any of these creatures is not to be taken seriously. Antivenin reduces the mortality rate from Laterodectus bites from around 6% to 1% or lower, and the symptoms of a black widow bite are not pleasant. Localised pain, swelling, sweating progressing to muscle cramps, spasms and paralysis with associated nausea, vomiting, fever and hypertension. But these spiders are not aggressive, the vast majority of bites are reported as occurring because of close contact/crushing of the spider against the skin. Bites appear to only occur in self defence. If you're careful, and know what you're doing, there's no reason why you couldn't carefully handle these spiders.

I doubt that the commonly held view on widow spiders is likely to change any time soon. Every news story about exotic spiders discovered in somewhere unusual is likely to contain the adjective "deadly." They can be deadly, although statistically much less deadly than a cow.


Or a horse. Or ecstasy, for that matter.

*DISCLAIMER - Stats are useful, but are a pain in the ass to calculate. That's for someone else to do.

** "potentially" - statistics again… It might kill you, but it also might not. Like a cigarette.

Thursday, 2 June 2011

A Grand Day Out

So, we decided to go to the British Tarantula Society's Annual Exhibition a couple of weekends ago (what else does one do of a Sunday...?) and what an experience it turned out to be. We were anticipating a small school hall with a few different exhibiters. Instead we found THIS:


Plus another smaller hall packed to the gunnels with all manner of thing both creepy and crawly. I had set out on a mission to buy nothing more than another giant African land snail (rest in peace Snaily - at least 10 years old!) and some more hissing cockroaches. I was then presented with all manner of amazing mantises:


Tempting spiders:


And lots of other awesome critters:


I was accompanied by Mrs Jim and some other not-so spider-loving friends who I think enjoyed themselves, especially considering at least one of them has a pathological dislike of arachnids. The pub lunch afterwards probably helped. It was good fun seeing who else was there too: from respectable middle-aged people, to very friendly enthusiasts, to spider-geeks and also Birmingham's entire goth and mullet-wearing population. It was unusual to feel like one of the most normal people in a room for a change.

The main mission for the day for Mrs Jim was to acquire a little Avicularia versicolor, a stunning arboreal tarantula. Unsurprisingly, given the immense selection there, we easily found our spider and named her Darcy. You can't see her in the photo because she's tiny but she is incredibly beautiful. As a juvenile they have a metallic dark blue colouring, which you can make out as she sits on my hand:



But once they are full grown they turn into an even more colourful creature, with a bright green carapace and pink abdomen, both with a metallic sheen. Being arboreal, they are much better climbers than the ground-dwelling species that are most popular as pets. They are also a little more tricky to keep, but I reckon that with our experience little Darcy will do just fine. In fact, she has already successfully moulted once since we've had her which is a good sign. Juveniles moult on a much more regular basis than adults as they are growing rapidly, and take a lot less time to harden after each moult. 48 hours after moulting, Darcy had already eaten a cricket that was nearly as big as she is. Arboreal tarantulas are also a lot more fleet-footed than their ground-dwelling counterparts, and we've already noticed this when we had her out for her photo shoot, the only thing that slowed her down were my hairy arms!

We'll definitely be heading to the BTS annual exhibition 2012, and can recommend it for spider-fans and unusual haircut lovers alike.

Saturday, 28 May 2011

T. blondi webbing

Our Theraphosa blondi, Xena, has started eating again after her recent moult and is now getting a lot bigger. She's larger than our adult B. albopinosa and has a long way to go too. She's large enough to take an adult locust, and really goes for prey - she's fast for a big spider.

Hopefully we'll get a hunting video up at some point soon, but for now have a look at her webbing the ground after taking an adult locust. I've seen both the B. albopinosa and G. rosea doing this after feeding, though I've no idea why they do it. Maybe it's to mark an area as a place with good prey, maybe they're just enjoying their food (a bit anthropomorphic, I know). Still whatever the reason, I think it makes for a cool video.

Wednesday, 9 March 2011

New Arrival: T. blondi, The Goliath Birdeater



As far a difficult to keep spiders go, there are few apparently as difficult as T.blondi, better known as the Goliath Birdeating spider. Although it very rarely lives up to its name as a birdeater (although will eat amphibians and small mammals) or its fearsome reputation, this spider is expensive pretty tricky to keep well in captivity.

So, cue having to buy a new house for our new arrival:



Just to give some sense of scale to this picture, the flower pot on the right hand side is large enough for me to put my fist into, so the left hand size one is pretty huge. This will be home to Xena, the Theraphosa blondi hopefully for her entire life. She is only a year or so old so this could be for the next 25 years, by which time I will be... rather old.

Anyway, Goliath Bird eaters are amazing spiders. They are among the largest species in the world (along with the similar Theraphosa apophysis and Lasiodora parahybana) growing to a maximum leg span of over 10 inches. Despite their size they are actually fairly chilled out and with practice by both handler and handlee can get used to being picked up. I imagine that you're thinking that sounds good in theory, but a bit more difficult in reality. Well, we decided to take the bull by the horns (or the spider by the pedipalps... Or is that just a little bit too geeky?) and hold her straight away. This was also useful to check for any mites or ticks - parasites which can be a problem for these sorts of tarantula.

Don't believe me? Well here we both are:



Yes, she is still a baby and will probably double in size before adulthood, but I still think she could be the largest spider I have ever held. It's a close run thing between her and our adult B. albopilosa, Curly, at any rate. T. blondi have a reputation of having some of the most irritating hairs of all tarantulas and it seems that Xena lived up to this reputation. My hands are still kinda itchy and I think gloves may be in order next time she comes out to play.

Xena seems contented enough in her new habitat, preferring the damp end to the dry end at them moment. I will be keeping the blog updated with any news about her, although having moulted in January, she is unlikely to moult again for a while. I will leave you with a picture of Xena in her new home.