Associate
That spider.
Nope.
Nope.
all of these species are photo-shopped , some more than others take the blue scorpion for example.. what a joke
all of these species are photo-shopped , some more than others take the blue scorpion for example.. what a joke
all of these species are photo-shopped , some more than others take the blue scorpion for example.. what a joke
What people fail to understand, is that it is probably a new type of the bird eating spider.
For instance, our Chillian Rose Tarantula is deemed a bird eating spider![]()
To mark the 20-year milestone, Still Counting…, edited by Leanne Alonso, is a new book that celebrates the work done so far and the work that continues to be done by RAP. CI has chosen 20 species that are biologically unique, threatened or rare, designating them as "RAP Stars" to mark the 20 years of field work. Let's take a look at them!
Thanks for the confirmation, I was pretty sure it wasn't by this team in the past 20 years anyway.
They specifically name Theraphosa blondi - which was described in the 1800s....
And now, to celebrate their 20 years of cataloguing, the group has released 20 of their favourite finds.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencet...tula-size-hand-got-knowing.html#ixzz1x8aueuPB
In fairness, the article does say the teams top 20 favourite finds, not the 20 recently found.
Scorpions emit a blue hue when exposed to UV light. I had an Emperor scorpion as per the article, and if exposed to bright sunlight it would take on a blueish tinge.
Imagine one of those Goliath spiders set up shop in your house and you didn't even know... as it crawled over your bedsheets at night, occasionally causing that tickle on your ankle that you barely even consciously register.

I've got a Psalmopoeus irminia loose in my room![]()

Beautiful spider! How did she get out?![]()
. My main concern is that someone finds it before I do
.