Warning over rise in UK's most dangerous spider due to warmer winters

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By JAYA NARAIN - More by this author » Last updated at 23:18pm on 2nd May 2007 Comments (7)

It may be no bigger than a pea, but its bite can put grown men in hospital.

And thanks to global warming, the false black widow spider is on the march across the country, posing a threat to gardeners and anyone else spending time outdoors.



Officially called steatoda nobilis, it is closely related to the black widow spider whose poison can be fatal to humans.



The species had kept a low profile since arriving in Britain with a cargo of bananas from the Canary Islands 200 years ago.



But according to Stuart Hine, an insect expert at the Natural History Museum, it is rapidly spreading.

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Global warming has led to the rapid rise in numbers of the false widow spider in Britain




"There is no doubt in my mind that this is due to the milder winters caused by global warming," he said.



"Every year, the UK is breaking records for warm temperatures and it is these temperatures that are keeping the spiders alive.



"It used to be only a handful of spiders would be able to survive the cold weather so the numbers were always kept down. But now they are all surviving the winter and are crawling out of hibernation earlier to mate.



"The numbers have just rocketed into the hundreds of thousands.



"They can hide in gardening gloves and will bite when you put your hand in. We would urge gardeners to be on their guard in the future."

A bite from the false black widow delivers enough poison to cause severe pain and inflammation.



Last year market trader Jason Fricker, 34, from Dorchester, Dorset, spent three days in hospital after one bit him on the chest.



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An entry on the Natural History Museum's website said a bite from the spider at first caused a burning sensation.



It then "increased in intensity, like being scalded, stabbing pains spread first to armpit then down right arm".



The entry concluded: "Also flu-like symptoms, aches, sweats, fatigue, perspiring, cold and shaky. Face and right arm went purplish and slightly puffy. Felt unwell for three days." Another victim reported that the bite lasted for a similar time before becoming infected.



One study found that the pain was far more severe than that from a wasp or bee sting.



Mr Hine added: "Normally an antihistamine cream will take the pain away but, depending on the amount of venom injected, a doctor may need to be seen."



The species - only the female of which bites - had been considered native to Dorset but has spread as far as East Anglia. It usually lives on walls, fences and tree bark.



Two of the spiders were found by Michael and Pam Willis in their garden in Verwood, Dorset.



Mrs Willis, 62, said: "I saw this elegant black spider crawling down the wall and then it scuttled into the electricity box. It looked totally different, not like your normal hairy spider - it was ever so shiny.



"I am petrified of spiders but managed to catch one of them in a jar as I could tell it was unusual.



"We took it to environmental health experts and they confirmed it was a false widow.
 
:eek:

If we get any more global warming then we'll turn into a desert country like IRAQ and the camel spiders will invade :eek: :eek: We'll have to STAB!
 
read this while in work on elreg, good story. though why its in the south west moving north and east, yet it is already in surrey building up a base, worries me!
 
iCraig said:
I have my lynx and lighter at the ready. Can't do much at 400 degrees can they? :cool:

With them not being able to see very well, you're going to lure the females using the Lynx and then trap them in a bag, attach the bag to a firework and use the lighter to set it off?

Cunning plan.... :p
 
B@Th*nG said:
it's not lethal, who cares

:confused: Unless something is going to kill you, you don't care about what it does.

"Damn, I'm scalding myself with the pan, my flesh is turning pink and blistery! Oh, well it's not lethal, I don't care"

:)
 
I love this comment posted on El Reg when the story appeared. I immediately thought of these forums :D

Mike said:
Bloody foreign spiders...

...coming over here stealing our webs.

How are the little ******* getting in? Hitchhiking on bunches of organic holistic happy-clappy Fairtrade bananas? clinging to the bottom of Eurostars whizzing back from Belgium? sneaking aboard Margaret Beckett's free-wheelin' caravan whilst she tours Calais' finest hypermarkets?

This could be a disaster for Middle England. The 'Daily Express' is going to have a fit that yeoman English spiders are being displaced by their workshy and swarthy foreign relatives. Inevitably it will lead on how toxic arachnid henchmen working for Prince Philip bit the driver of Princess Diana's car, causing the fatal crash, meanwhile the Mail will worry: 'EVIL FOREIGN SPIDERS THREATEN HOUSE PRICES'.

I expect nothing less than the appointment of a minister for alien spiders and a Commons statement assuring us that biometric identity cards (or indeed biometric catflaps) will soon solve this eight-legged crisis.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/05/03/spider_warming/
 
I am more concerned with the statement that there are already 12 species of spiders in Britain that bite! :eek:

DIESTABINTHEFACENUKEFROMORBITWITHMUSTARD!!!!!!
 
ffs!

I had a spider that looked just like that (I think) on my bedroom ceiling a few days ago. I was that tired I thought i'd leave it be... now its just waiting for me to vibrate and it's gonna bite my ass :(
 
If you fear spiders then im sure the above is not what you want to hear, if not then not exactly worth a panic over as it will hurt but not going to kill you by all accounts...
 
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