A photo guide to my favorite spiders
From the time I was about 5, I would spend my summer vacations walking along the hedgerows in southern England looking for spiders. These days, I take expeditions looking for rare spiders in the most remote jungles on Earth.
In truth, I get the same buzz of excitement now as I did way back then. That’s why I do it!
And I do it for these guys, my favorite spiders:
PINK TOE TARANTULA
Avicularia Avicularia
Lives: Amazon rain forest, South America
Legspan: Up to 6 inches
Body length: Up to 2 1/2 inches
Dangerous to humans? No
A tree-living tarantula that makes silk tubes in leaves. It eats anything of suitable size, including large insects, frogs, even small bats and birds. When disturbed, pink toes throw themselves into the air and “parachute” to the ground on their long hairy legs. Then they simply climb up another tree and start over. If they land on water, they float and just paddle themselves to dry land. Pink toes are probably the most successful tarantula family on earth. They are docile, gentle spiders that I love to handle and watch.
JUMPING SPIDER
Salticidae sp.
Lives: Worldwide
Legspan: 1 inch or smaller
Body length: 3/8 inch or smaller
Dangerous to humans? No
Fascinating little hunters that have the best eyesight (for their size) of any animal on Earth. Brightly colored with complex mating displays, jumping spiders hunt during the day and catch their prey by jumping on it from as far as 12 times their own body length away. Beautiful, intelligent little arachnids (spiders) that even arachnophobes (people afraid of said spiders) don’t freak-out too much at.
CHICKEN SPIDER
Pamphobeteus sp.
Lives: Amazon River headwaters, Southeastern Peru
Legspan: 10 inches
Body length: 4 inches
Dangerous to humans? Bites likely to be painful but not fatal
One of the largest and heaviest in the world. Very unusual in that it lives in large groups of a mother and her young or “spiderlings.” (Most spiders live alone.) The chicken spider has also been known to share its burrow with a small frog. We think the frog eats parasites such as ticks and mites or insects such as ants that could bother the spider. In return, the frog gets protection from a spider with one-inch-long fangs! A spectacular species, from a spectacular forest.
NET-CASTING SPIDER
Pamphobeteus sp.
Lives: Tropics worldwide
Legspan: 4 inches
Body length: 2 inches
Dangerous to humans: No
Here is a spider that has given up just sitting on a web. This species builds one and uses it like a fishing net. It holds the web in its long legs and hangs upside-down over a branch or log waiting for an insect to walk past. It then throws its net over the insect, gathers it up and eats at its leisure. This extraordinary way of catching prey is unique to the net-caster and has to be seen to be believed!
KUTAI EARTH TIGER
Lampropelma sp.
Lives: Kalimantan, Indonesia
Legspan: 7 inches
Body length: 3 inches
Dangerous to humans? Unknown
This spider will always hold a special place for me, as it is a new species, unknown to science when I found it in the dense jungle of Eastern Borneo. It is a large, black tarantula-type spider with a pattern of orange hairs on the carapace (back). It lives in deep burrows lined with silk. At night, it stands at the mouth of its burrow waiting for an insect or small lizard to come close. I still remember the rush of seeing this beast for the first time, at night, in the beam of my flashlight.
GOLIATH BIRDEATER
Theraphosa blondi
Lives: Northeastern South America
Legspan: 12 inches
Body length: 4 inches
Dangerous to humans? Bites very painful but not fatal
It is impossible to make a list of favorite spiders without mentioning the “daddy” of them all, goliath, the largest arachnid on the planet. It is plain, chestnut-brown in color and has a real nasty attitude — it hisses, it kicks irritating hairs at you and will bite if you provoke it. But when you see this monster up close there is only one word to describe it — awesome!
BOLAS SPIDER
Ordgarius magnificus
Lives: Australia
Legspan: 10 inches
Body length: 4 inches
Dangerous to humans? No
Another spider that gave up just sitting on webs to go fishing. But this one is a hook-and-line sort of guy, not a net-man. The spider spins a line of silk and puts a drop of sticky glue on the end. Then, the clever part: It produces a chemical that male moths find irresistible.
It waits for them to fly close and swings its fishing line in circles. Eventually the line catches a moth with the sticky end, and the spider just reels in its catch. Truly, one of the wonders of the natural world.
i caught a spider in my room- I’ve had it in a jar since last night
I live in UK and had a massive female cardinal spider in my shed for many years . Just this summer she appears to have gone , died I think , but she left behind four egg sacs and lots of spiderlings ! I hope one of them survives and stays with me .
I’m from New Zealand and have an awesome pet Tunnel Web spider. No No,not the deadly Australian Funnel web spider, this spider is a close reletive to the Sydney funnel web spider but has a bite that feels like a Bee has stung you.
i want a wolf spider
well well well, i’m glad you all ate my choclot,
i love the wolf spider. i think they are so neat!!! i want one!!!
i like the crayon spider.