Warning! If you are arachnophobic you may not want to see this list, but I really suggest that you do. You may find that these creatures are more diverse and fascinating than they are creepy. Spiders have never ceased to amaze me; they are among the most abundant predators in the world and have adapted to almost any imaginable habitat except for the sea, giving rise to countless species many of which remain unknown to science. If people would stop to watch spiders instead of simply squashing them on sight, I’m sure they would be amazed constantly. This list is only a very small selection of bizarre spiders from around the world.
This spider has one of the most effective camouflages of all animals; its body is covered on blobs and warts that give it the appearance of a fresh piece of bird excrement; it often produces a small thread of white silk and sits on it so that it looks like the white stains caused by bird droppings falling onto leaves. And as if this was not amazing enough, it also smells like poop. This camouflage has a double function; it makes the spider a rather unappetizing prey for most animals (especially birds themselves), and it serves as a lure for the small, excrement-loving insects which are the spider’s favorite prey. These spiders are found in Asia, from Indonesia to Japan.
Usually known as the Whip Spider, although this name is also used for another arachnid and could lead to confusion. Found in Australia, this spider has a long, thin abdomen similar to a snake’s body, hence its species name colubrinus, which means “snake-like”. Its unusual appearance is, again, an example of camouflage. By looking like a small twig caught in spider silk, it escapes notice by most predators, and is less easily spotted by its prey. The whip spider belongs to the same family as the dangerous black widow. It is not known how potent the whip spider’s venom really is, but it is usually regarded as harmless due to its docile nature and short chelicerae (fangs).
So named because of the female’s weird abdomen, ended in a “tail” similar to that of a scorpion. When threatened, the scorpion-tailed spider arches this tail as a scorpion would. Only the female has a tail; the male looks more like an ordinary spider and is much smaller. These creatures are, again, found in Australia and they seem to be completely harmless. They spin circular webs and are often found in colonies, although each female spider has its own web and doesn’t venture into those of other females.
This spider was named Bagheera kiplingi after Bagheera, the black panther character in The Jungle Book, and the book’s author Rudyard Kipling. It was seemingly named because of it’s panther-like agility, which is common to all jumping spiders. However, while all the other known jumping spiders are predators, Bagheera is almost completely vegetarian, feeding almost exclusively on acacia buds and nectar. They use their agility to escape the aggressive ants that usually protect acacia trees from other animals. Occasionally, the Bagheera spider feeds on ant larvae, and even, if very hungry, on other Bagheeras (it’s still a spider, after all!) Funnily enough, there is a chapter in The Jungle Book in which, during a period of food scarcity, Bagheera the panther claims that he hopes he could be a vegetarian!
I’ve already introduced this spider in the surreal animal list, but it just has to be in this one too. Found in Madagascar and parts of Africa and Australia, these bizarre predators have long necks designed to support the weight of their enormous jaws, and they feed almost exclusively on other spiders, hence their name. Despite their fearsome appearance and name, they are completely harmless to humans. An interesting note is that these spiders are survivors from the age of dinosaurs! Perhaps that’s why they look so alien nowadays?
Known usually as the Water Spider or Diving Bell Spider, it is the only completely aquatic spider in the world. It is found in Europe and Asia, from the UK to Siberia, and lives in ponds, slow moving streams and shallow lakes. Since it cannot take oxygen directly from water, the Water Spider builds an underwater retreat with silk, and fills it with air it carries from the surface (by trapping air bubbles in the hairs that cover its body and legs). Once filled with air, the silk retreat becomes bell shaped and has a silvery shine, hence the spider’s name (Argyroneta means “silvery net”). The spider spends most of its time inside the bell, and only has to replenish the air once in a while. It feeds on whatever aquatic invertebrate they can capture, including backswimmers, water striders and diverse larvae; they also hunt tadpoles and small fish occasionally.
Rather than being a single species, horned spiders, also known as Spiny Orb Weavers, are a genus that includes as many as 70 known species, with many more yet to be discovered. They are found all around the world and are completely harmless despite their frightening appearance; the horns and spines are supossed to be a deterrent to birds. These spiders are also noted for adding small silk “flags” to the edges of their webs. These flags make the web more visible to small birds, which can then steer away before becoming entangled on the web. Horned spiders are found all around the world, often in gardens and near houses.
Yet another Australian species. Commonly known as the Peacock spider, due to the brightly colored, circular flap in the male’s abdomen. Just like an actual peacock, the male of this diminutive species raises this flap like a colorful fan and uses it to catch the female’s attention (they have extremely acute eyesight, as do most jumping spiders); it also vibrates its hind legs and abdomen for a more dramatic effect. Another common trait with the peacock is that the male Maratus will sometimes court several females at the same time. Until recently, it was thought that the male peacock spider was capable of gliding through the air; according to some, it would extend the flap when leaping, and therefore increase its jumping distance, hence its name (volans means “flying”). Today we know that the flap is for display purposes only. But that doesn’t make it any less awesome.
This spider is an incredible example of Batesian mimicry, when one animal deters potential predators by “disguising” as an unpalatable or dangerous animal of another species. In this case, it is a jumping spider that looks like a Weaver Ant. The Weaver Ant is noted for its painful bite and also because they produce two different chemicals that increase the pain in the bite wound. They are very aggressive ants and the effects of their bite can last for several days. Many birds, reptiles and amphibians avoid these ants.
On the other hand, the Myrmarachne spider is harmless and shy; however, it pretends to be just as tough by looking and walking almost exactly as a Weaver Ant; its cephalothroax (the front section of a spider’s body) is modified so that it looks like the distinct head and thorax of an ant, and it has two black spots that mimic the ant’s eyes. Its forelegs mimic the ant’s antennae, so the spider looks as if it had only six legs, like an actual ant. Myrmarachne plataleoides is only found in India, China and South Eastern Asia, but is not the only ant-mimicking spider; many other species are found around the world’s tropics and they imitate many different kinds of aggressive ant.
No kidding. This is a real animal, closely related to the black widow spider and found in the rainforests of Hawaii, where it is known as nananana makaki’i. It is not known to be dangerous to humans in any way. The strange patterns in the spider’s yellow abdomen often take the form of a smiling face, although in some individuals the markings are less obvious or even absent. Some happy face spiders can actually have markings reminiscent of a frowning or screaming face!
Although this is not the only spider with face-like markings, it is certainly the one with the most notorious one. Unfortunately, it is the only spider in this list considered as endangered, due to its limited range and the reduction of its natural habitat.






























PAN PIPE DREAMS SPIDER.
You can thank me for that later.
NUMBER 7 IS ADORABLE!!!
@deftek [59]:
I take note. Although, just for the record, this is not MY site. I’m just the Animal Planet channel here.
TyB, I should be asleep, but rampant insomnia is upon me again.It does, however, give me a chance to ask you a question which has been haunting me for some time now.
Are you a Biologist or Zoologist? Do you study animals, two-legged, four-legged, six-legged, and/or eight-legged professionally?
(Yes, I am aware that I left out no-legged, but I did it for a reason.)
@segues [64]:
No, I am not a professional. I have worked in zoos and I’ve been studying animals since I was a kid. I may start zoology career this year but right now you could say I am an amateur.
Why did you leave no-legged animals out?
#10: “This spider has one of the most effective camouflages of all animals; its body is covered on blobs and warts that give it the appearance of a fresh piece of bird excrement; it often produces a small thread of white silk and sits on it so that it looks like the white stains caused by bird droppings falling onto leaves.”
okay. you’ve written several animal lists lately. my guess is you are interested in natural history & have been using the web to satisfy your quest for knowledge-kudos! I was the same way-but we didn’t have the internet when I was a kid, we had libraries…now…
please please please reconsider using such superlatives as “best this or greatest that” in the future. this shows me that you are delighted & amazed with the wonders of natural selection; but lack the formal education or training to not infuse your personal opinion in each list you submit. it is of no consequence to share your amazement-just try to be more objective & less subjective if you want to ever pursue a career in the biological sciences. (although it is never incorrect to state your amazement or passions in superlatives!)
oh-the “white stains caused by bird droppings falling onto leaves” is not a stain, but since all avians have kidneys that posses both mammalian & reptilian qualities, the “white stains” are urates, along with the feces & liquid urine.
being a recent graduate (as of yesterday), might I suggest an associates degree in Veterinary Technology? you will then be able to learn about several species (domestic, exotic, & wild),their physiology, anatomy, diseases, & treatment. it’s a good foundation to build on, & once you get your prerequisites, it is only a 2 year program. just make sure it is AVMA accredited!
@ringtailroxy [66]:
“my guess is you are interested in natural history & have been using the web to satisfy your quest for knowledge-kudos”
That’s not my aim. My aim is to make these creatures better known and make more people interested on them; I talk about animals to everyone I know, not only in the internet. Kudos are always nice but what really makes me happy is when people expresses their amazement when introduced to creatures they never had heard about.
“we didn’t have the internet when I was a kid, we had libraries…now…”
Actually, most of what I know, I learned from books. I didn´t have access to internet until I was 13. But there’s no doubt that the web is incredible when it comes to finding about the most obscure species!
“this shows me that you are delighted & amazed with the wonders of natural selection; but lack the formal education or training to not infuse your personal opinion in each list you submit”
I really don´t care. I don´t want to be formal, I want people to share the amazement I feel when I learn of nature’s great creations. If my writing is that of an excited kid and not a know it all scientist, so be it, I see no point in disguising my awe. Plus, I’m writing a fun list for laypeople, not a zoology paper!
“oh-the “white stains caused by bird droppings falling onto leaves” is not a stain, but since all avians have kidneys that posses both mammalian & reptilian qualities, the “white stains” are urates, along with the feces & liquid urine”
Correct. Urate stains.
“being a recent graduate (as of yesterday), might I suggest an associates degree in Veterinary Technology?”
I sincerely appreciate your suggestion. I don´t think it’s my path, but still thanks for your interest.
O.K. @ babystomper 51 & 54 first,
(Although the now-understood and appreciated olveralbq may also pick up a few positive points.)
And segues knows via our almost instictive understanding that I almost have no need to thank her for her ever-valued support.
“Segues, before you start standing up to a complete stranger for another complete stranger, consider this: It’s the internet, and no one TRULY cares what you have to say (unless you’re writing a list, of course). So, stop it.”
So why are you bothering then? Bit of a pot calling the kettle black contradictive ***** aren’t you? (Got the word +*****+ from my thesaurus BTW, it make a change from +dickhead+.) As for segues and I being complete strangers, well your *****-blind ignorance there has already been exposed.
“@ 38 Casualreader
Before you get your panties in a bunch, you should realize that “Get the ***** outta here” is an expression of disbelief and awe. I don’t think anyone was saying that you’re incompetent. You’re just too eager to show everyone that you’re not a retard, so you look in your thesaurus for big words to retort with. Dickhead.
Where did you get that big, fat Greek word +thesaurus+ from, babystomper? A thesaurus?
I smell a strong whiff of U.S. cultural imperialism in your post: +you should realize that “Get the ***** outta here” is an expression of disbelief and awe.+ Why should I? Because you and others say so? When ever I’ve heard anyone say that anywhere I lived or been, they *****ing well meant it literally. Obviously segues, who’s lived almost all her life in California, didn’t, and thought it was rude. Yes?
FYI, although the majority of its posters are from the U.S., its site owner is a New Zealander, and the site rules require comments to be written in English, which I take to mean either:
(a) Standard English such as I always use except when *****ing about (which I often do BTW).
(b) Colloquialisms which may be REASONABLY expected to be understood throughout the world. or
(c) Local colloquialisms or slang between regular LVers who have established that as a common bond.
FYI. Yes the use of long words for their own sweet sakes can sometimes obfuscate meaning (i.e. ***** it up). But on the other hand they help to keep the exisiting richness and diversity of language alive. They are also invaluable tools for avoiding ambiguity (i.e. they stop people spatting each other for ***** all reason). In case you hadn’t noticed, both science and the law use long words and careful constructions. Why? Because neither can afford the risk of their statements, instructions and conclusions being misunderstood.
I need to prove I’m not a retard? Hahaha. Get the ***** outta here. (Literally.)
oliveralbq. If you’re reading, please keep looking in. I haven’t time to give you the decent reply you deserve and don’t know when I will. Sometime today or tomorrow, with luck. But for starters, take segue’s last post as from me as well.
Bugger! My poor little Kipling parody (40) got lost in all this *****e. Well, perhaps natural hostory and literature aren’t good bedfellows anyway.
@Casualreader [69]:
Don´t say that :O I wrote two fiction books revolving around wildlife :/
That was very interesting. Although I don’t like spiders as a rule, I’ve tried to be more tolerant of them, like by leaving the little cobweb spider in my bathroom alone.
I still don’t like jumping spiders, though, because they might jump on me! And I stay away from the big ones. Yuck!
@ TyB, 70,
You score so high for interacting in the posts after your lists, unlike other LV authors at times. You’re always polite and informative too, even in the face of critisism, albeit positive, such as that of ringtailroxy. Congrats. And continuing thanks for your lists.
It’s never difficult to criticise a list made by one with equal or less knowledge, above all if the critic is an academic or professional specialist. IMHO, this should be reserved for really bad lists or errors or howlers which might mislead or misinform. Otherwise it can become holier than thou or know-all nitpicking and invites the retort, +Well, if you know so much better, why didn’t you do it+? I try to limit myself to reasonable intervention or adding to the list without subtracting, although I.m aware I don’t always succeed.
BTW, I think science caters for itself (says he, trying to avoid a phrase like +looks up its own arse/ass+!) sufficiently as it is. Often, especially in the fields of cladistics, phylogenetics and cytology, important those these are, it talks in language incomprehensible to the man in the street. You are absolutely right. Communication of the wonders of nature to the world at large is not only important, but the future of conservation decisions may well hang on it. +Animals and plants don’t have votes, only we can vote for them, and only majority votes carry+ is a cliché that’s been spouted often enough. But no less true for that, as the likes of Attenborough, Wilson, De Vries and other big names, often basic bilogical specialists themselves, understand.
I take you point, and hope that if already on the market your works are selling well and widely, or if not yet published, will do in future. If you need someone with a thesaurus to sharpen up your prose … Hahaha.
In fact my intention was +literary literature+. Plenty of +great+ general authors knew/know and wrote/write about natural history too. Kipling himself, for example, D.H. Lawrence (+Bavarian Gentians+), Ted Hughes and others.
But maybe not me as a spellchecker though. – Critisism indeed! Hahaha.
And I’m sure there are plenty of medics who specialise in the treatment of bile conditions, but not the three BIOLOGISTS I mentioned!
@TyB [65]:…Why did you leave no-legged animals out?
****
Because, as far as I can remember, you haven’t done a list on no-legged animals.
@TyB [70]:..I wrote two fiction books revolving around wildlife :/
****
You must get me the names of your books! JFrater can get you my private e.mail addy.
@Casualreader [72]:..Ted Hughes…
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AH! I can never hear, or see, the name Ted Hughes without my mind going into multiple avenues of bliss. His own works, of course, are forever wonderful, worthy of being read over and again until you aren’t so much as reading them, as reciting them with the book open in front of you.
Cross avenue, Sylvia Plath. A brilliant star, streaking across the sky, skipping on the atmosphere, burning out by her own hand. Too quickly, too quickly!
Cross avenue Ted Hughes, Seamus Heaney, whose Beowulf translation is, for me, pure celestial music.
Oh! Don’t get me started! I have so much work to do with my images, I can’t afford a reading jag at this moment, and there is a new update of my digital photo workshop to purchase and install, learn and apply. Two weeks to finish getting ready an entire one-woman show…no time to read!
I’m terrified of spiders but I loved this list, and what made it even better was knowing that I’ll probably never come into contact with any of these lol.
@Casualreader [72]:…Attenborough, Wilson, De Vries…
****
Oh, Cas,are you really trying to undermine my art, or am I just too interested in the same/similar studies as you? I recently finished another book by Dawkins, and you already know my addiction to Wilson. Have you read any Quammen? I quite like his style.
I’ll stop now, I feel dangerously close to going entirely off-topic into both anthropology and physics. I can afford no more play time.
@TyB [70]: I have some pix of a spider I found in my garden earlier in the year; both back and abdomen. I’d like to send you them to you for possible identification.
How does anyone find time to read multiple books about multiple subjects? I’ve been struggling to read Lord of the Rings since late last year.
@ 78, segues, (and a brief memo for oliveralbq),
Yes thanks, my dear. +The Song of the Dodo+. Required reading for the likes of us, yes? And I think it should be on TyB’s menu if he hasn’t already devoured it.
Sorry about your work schedule. I’ll try to keep mum, which might help mine a bit as well. Getting sucked into LV with too little resistance recently! You know how it is. My e-mail +normal service+ has been off a long time for that and other reasons, but hopefully will be +resumed as soon as possible+.
But no letting up answering you, oliveralbq, when I’ve got more than a flying, passing moment like this.
Oh segues (or seggys? I bet you’d hate that! I love Cas.),
Your spider or any other nat hist. The best place in the world to trace and buy books on nat. hist. is to screen up the website of nhbs (Natural History Book Store/Shop). It’s a treasure mine if you don’t already know. 300 books on dragonflies from all over the world. Stuff like (I’m guessing, but it could be) +A Field Guide to the Dragonflies of Indonesia+, for example. I think the compete monograph volumes of the dragonflies of Japan costs around $1000 U.S.! Anybody?
It has multiple references by subject and area, popularity, etc., etc. If you want it and its in print and in stock, they’ll have it.
All you need to do is beam up botany and biology. When you get there biology. Then spiders. Then area, the Americas, then try California. If that’s too specific, try North America. That could be big bucks indeed, but you might be able to persuade your local public library to get it loaned in once you have a title. I don’t know if that works in the U.S.
@undaunted warrior 1 [39]: Yeah those are scary things!my mom got bitten by one , they had to cut out a golf ball sized area of flesh from her leg because of the nocrosis its bite caused .They like chilling in cubboards in clothes and bedding and eat fish motns etc , so you can get bitten just getting dressed .I know a doctor who obsessively cleans out all the cubboards with doom and a vacuum every week because of the bites hes seen.
*necrosis
@Casualreader [80]: “But no letting up answering you, oliveralbq, when I’ve got more than a flying, passing moment like this.”
—take your time….i am not going anywhere…
—i just wanted you to understand where i was coming from…which i believe has been accomplished. now, whenever you get the requisite time, of course i would love to hear back from you. however (like you) i often go through days in which flying, passing moments are few and far between.. but i will chec k this thread on occasion, per your request.
—and to @segues [58],and @Casualreader [68]: “take segue’s last post as from me as well”
—done
of course, olive trees dont *actually* grow in this area, but we can call that metaphorical. as for the beer part…..well, as you know, i can be in new orleans in 25 minutes — and part of rebuilding after hurricane katrina, was to renovate and reopen some wonderful old haunts away from the beaten path.
–i have never turned down good conversation among friends
hey nice list.
I am very frightened of spiders. to me they are the creepiest animals for ever. but ur list seems to make me curious about them. hoping for the next list of spiders to come out.
Kick ass list! I hate spiders, but this list makes me see now that there are much more to spiders, than they just crawling along a wall with the intention of creeping me out… The Bagheera kiplingi is so, umm, adorable! It has puppy eyes…
TyB, you never cease to amaze me with your list quality. Superb.
ohh…I love David Quammen’s works! First book I read was “Song of the DoDo”, but I think I enjoyed “Monster of God” best.
I like Edward O. Wilson’s works as well…
but oh-well. I guess sometimes, in our personal pursuit of knowledge, we may become a bit jaded because we know things & scoff at others whom do not. It’s a fault I am trying to improve on.
OK, these spiders didnt scare me as much as I thought they would… The poop one is just really, really unfortunate looking!
A scuba trip to Australia is on my bucket list (for this year actually). As some of you know, my husband planned it for our honeymoon and then forgot to ask if I needed a visa… So yeah. Anyway, I´m curious as to how I can enjoy Australia without living in paralysing fear of the wide variety of creepy crawlies on the island….
TyB, I´m loving your Animal Planet vibe on LV!
Hey everyone! Ur comments make me happy
Especially those from people who “hates” spiders and liked the list anyway!
@segues [78]:
Sure, I’ll do my best. Guess u can get my add from JFrater? I’d rather not post my e-mail here (spammers and all that…)
@ringtailroxy [87]: Natural Acts is a slim volume, but well worth reading.
@ringtailroxy [87]: Natural Acts is Quammen, I should have noted.
@Casualreader [81]:…seggys?…
****
You may call me anything. I love seggys. It’s the first not-segue name I have liked at all, and of course you would come up with it.
Cas and seggys, I love it!
@TyB [89]: I’ll see what I can do. It would be wonderful if you knew right off the top of your head exactly what this arachnid happens to be. Luckily, I did take c/u pix of both sides, so you have double the chances. (?)
Last year I found what appeared to be a newt in the west side yard. It was glistening red, with red eyes. I know the red eyes make it sound like an albino, but the entire animal was the exact same shade of red all over, even the underbelly. I would expect an albino’s coloring (or lack of coloring) to allow it to “burn” a bright red on the skin always exposed to the sun, but not on that protected from the sun.
@segues [92]:
I’ve seen those “newts” (actually a kind of salamander if I’m not mistaken), but I can´t remember the name right now. I know I have a book with its pic!
@astraya [79]:..How does anyone find time to read multiple books about multiple subjects?
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astraya, it’s simply a habit I never lost from my school days. Back at Uni, and before, we all had to be reading multiple books on multiple subjects. I just kept it up, all these many years, and years, and decades later. It does keep the old grey matter limber.
As for time? In bed before Morpheus carries me off, on those nights he is being cooperative. Rarer and rarer these days (uh, nights).
@TyB [93]: I’ve seen those “newts” (actually a kind of salamander if I’m not mistaken)
****
Lovely, aren’t they? Salamander sounds about right, too! They can’t be too common, not with that coloring, or I’d have seen more than the one.
Mostly we have lizards and little skinny snakes, and tarantulas by the thousands after the first rains of the year. People from the village actually go driving on the roads we all know are particularly heavy with the critters.
This year I scared a guest of ours half to death by getting out of the car, and lying down on the road to get some close-ups of the spiders. She actually thought they would jump onto me and bite me. It took everything I had not to laugh.
If we’re going to be on short-name basis, you can call me “ass”. If you are feeling particularly affectionate, you can call me “my ass”, as in “That was a very funny comment, my ass!”
I fell out of the habit of reading in Korea, particularly under the influence of a split schedule and a broadband internet connection. I read a lot on the internet, but generally in a too unfocused way, and reading on the internet isn’t really the same. I used to work in a major suburb with a number of very good second-hand or discount bookshops. I also knew of others in the city. While I was away, most of the shut down while I was away.
I used to live in a very small apartment and ran out of bookshelf space. I did two major culls before I went to Korea. At the moment my books are in piles in the garage, to save lugging them up three flights and then back down sometime in the the medium future when we buy and move. We’ve recently bought a car, which means I’ve got a major excuse to visit the garage more regularly.
Major excuse, my ass.
Well, segues and casualreader, forgive my capitalization or lack thereof. I don’t make a point to capitalize or avoid capitalization of someone’s screen name on the internet, so… well… suck it up.
I think it’s pretty safe to assume that you’re just a couple of complete strangers (By complete stranger, I mean you have never met each other face to face. e-mailing and instant-messaging and phone-calling and giggling don’t count), what with the nearly 7 billion people in the world. Even though not even a quarter of them HAVE internet, I find it difficult to believe that you two or longtime friends. If you are, well then, you’re two in less than 2 billion. I’m willing to admit my error based on (slightly skewed) statistics like these. Now, if you two are gonna keep a stick up your ass about the whole thing, well then, I don’t really care because I don’t know you. If you’re willing to admit that everyone (including me) overreacted a tad bit, then I would treat all four to a beer (if I could do such a thing).
And to answer your statement, yes, I am an American. And no, I don’t think that makes me culturally retarded.
Number 4 (Spiney Orb Weaver), we call a “Kite Spider” and used to have a lot of them around our old house in Houston, Texas.
I watched one finishing up a perfectly round, classic web in front of our front gate, then had to sadly destroy the web & relocate the spider to the back yard (the web covered the entire front gate and I had to get in).
“These creatures are, again, found in Australia and they seem to be completely harmless.”
Yeah… Living in the U.S., and having watched enough National Geographic Channel specials, I’ve learned that NOTHING in Australia is harmless! Between Iracongi and Box Jellyfish, Funnel Web Spiders, Inland & Coastal Taipans, the Death Adder, the Blue Ring Octopus and baby-eating dingos, I am amazed anyone leaves their houses in Australia.
Those living in the USA or Canada have a far greater chance of being killed by a deer or mousse than Australians have of being killed by all of those things put together, simply because some of them go hunting them in their habitat. I basically don’t go anywhere that those things might be. Americans even have a far greater chance of being killed by a snake, because far more of them venture into the outdoors than Australians do. Despite our stereotype of being bush-dwellers, most Australians live in cities and stay there). While researching a list, I read statistics on snakebite fatalities in Australia. The number that don’t involved blundering around the bush drunk and barefoot at night is vanishingly small.
A few weeks ago there was an article comparing dangers from wildlife between Aus and the USA. I thought it would come in handy, but I didn’t bookmark it.
(I’m typing this from work, so I did indeed leave my apartment this morning! I was in more danger from a traffic accident than I was from any wildlife.)
Those living in the USA or Canada have a far greater chance of being killed by a deer or mousse
****
Damn, my ass! I don't know where you get your information from, but as far I know, most hair products here have been safety tested.
I’m not sure if this is a specific kind of spider or just one unique spider but is cool none the less.
http://cuteoverload.com/2009/01/12/that-spiky-hair/
@GTT [88]: Steve “the crocodile hunter” Irwin got killed scuba diving in Australia ,and he was indestructable , id be nervous too.
Steve Irwin loved crocodiles, but he had a soft spot in his heart for stingrays!
Don’t go scuba diving. Problem solved.
#4 Hahaha yes, I also lived in Florida- Boca Raton, and I found them frequently at my home and my friends’ homes. They are a nuisance, because they make webs EVERYWHERE. from rooftop to the tip of a small leaf even if the distance is 6 feet, it is ridiculous. I assure you, if you disturb one of these, they pack a HUGE bite for their size and leave a decent sized (continually stinging) inflammation.
Thanks astraya (“Australia” ‘er?) for clearing that up. Now I almost feel safe enough to take a walk-about.
BTW, about that Steve Irwin joke… That is SO WRONG, and yet SO FUNNY!
;D
As a person who is extremely afraid of spiders (like panic attack when i see a small one in my house), when I saw number 7 all I could think was AWWW how cute!!!
@Screamimg Monkey(105) Astraya is how Australia sounds coming from a very broad accented Aussie, or even not so broad…
Great list! I had no idea we actually had any non venemous spiders! Lol.
@sisterjanet [107]:
Actually, all spiders in this list are venomous, as are most spiders. But only a few have strong enough venom to cause harm to humans.
(Yeah, I figured; that’s why I commented on his name).
I actually like spiders, and whenever my Kindergartners find one in the classroom I teach them not to kill them and just observe them (they’re usually a type of jumping spider).
However, the one spider that REALLY creeps me out are “Daddy Long-Leg” Spiders. Back when I was a Boy Scout and we would go to summer camp, the canvas tents were always FULL of these creepy little things clustered by the hundreds up in the corners, bouncing up & down on top of each other. >¦¬Þ
By the way, I would probably also crap myself if I saw a Giant Spiked Cave Spider !
See picture here… http://www.boingboing.net/giant%20spider%202w.jpg
@astraya [100]: The number that don’t involved blundering around the bush drunk and barefoot at night is vanishingly small.
So, my ass, are you saying that there is a large number of incidents involving drunken barefoot, bush stomping? What the hell do you australians do for fun??
Steve Irwin loved crocodiles, but he had a soft spot in his heart for stingrays!
So wrong….
Don’t go scuba diving. Problem solved.
That was actually the whole point of the trip… Freaking creepy crawlies…
TyB, wonderful list! I’m the oddball in my family as I won’t kill spiders unless they’re obviously a danger, such as a black widow in our house; black widows outside are left alone though, usually. Other spiders inside our house get transferred outside. But I digress. You’re a nature-lover after my own heart – THANKS for this list!
@GTT [112]: I’m saying that there are a very small number of snakebite fatalities in Australia at all, but that most of them involve any or all of the above risk factors.
Did anyone else think the Bagheera Kiplingi was kind of adorable in that picture? Not something I generally say about spiders…
@ babystomper, 97,
“I think it’s pretty safe to assume that you’re just a couple of complete strangers (By complete stranger, I mean you have never met each other face to face. e-mailing and instant-messaging and phone-calling and giggling don’t count).”
Hmmmmmm. Funny concept of language, its comprehension and meaning some have. Never heard of pen-friends (they may never meet)? Heard of +84 Charing Cross Road+ – a famous, intense, transatlantic friendship built solely on written correspondence? Ever heard of +brides by post+? Two +complete strangers+ actually getting married? +Complete strangers+ would do THAT! Errr, well no, actually. They know enough about each other, and are often already on sufficiently intimate not-having-met-personally terms to fall in love before they in fact do meet.
Lets have a more technical look, shall we?
Complete (you might have used +perfect+ just as well): total, entire, not lacking, incapable of being added to, absolute.
Stranger; unknown or unrecognised person, outsider, someone unfamiliar or unrecognised.
Those definitions were taken from linguistic sources. There now. Did you see the phrases +not having been met before+, or +not having seen each other before+? No, of course not, because they aren’t part of the accurate definition of a stranger, let alone a complete one. You’re perfectly at liberty to make up your own eccentric meanings, but not to assume they extend to others, or even belong outside your own mind.
With those thoughts, I will, along with my good, sweet, familiar, long-standing, +complete stranger+ soul-mate – seggys to me – I’m Cas to her – bid you farewell. We surely share a little pity in our hearts for how you apparently isolate yourself from the great, wonderful world of friendship beyond your immediate eyesight. There’s quite a bit of it about here in LV if you cast your reading eyes around.
Cas, I couldn’t have said it better. The feelings are absolutely, entirely, completely, without reservation, mine as well.
Vegetarian spider:http://www.livescience.com/animals/091012-vegetar…
nice list. i'm an arachnophobic but i like your list..
Wow Liz, that veggie spider is REALLY cute! Let's compare…
Vegetarian Jumping Spider:http://www.livescience.com/animals/091012-vegetar…
Giant Spiked Cave Spider:http://www.boingboing.net/giant%20spider%202w.jpg
Which would you rather see crawling up your pant leg ?