Wow Jess! I'm glad you made it through. That's pretty scary :/.
Wow Jess! I'm glad you made it through. That's pretty scary :/.
https://m.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10203589094112277&id=1363241107&set =a.1434844115446.2055312.1363241107&source=11&ref= bookmark
Thanks guys.......they scare me, but I still find them beautiful & fascinating!! I own 2 tarantulas and the fangs are much bigger, but they don't make me jump & cry like a Widow does!!
Interesting thread.
Spiders definitely are not my choice of pet or for feeding.
As Ivory experienced, spiders can cause some pretty nasty damage through the process of a bite.
While I was in Japan I was bitten while sleeping and woke up with the right side of my body paralyzed and intense burning pain. Ended up with a nice size hole cut out of my thigh and a drain tube hanging out of it for a week.
We also had the occasional large poisonous centipede charging through the house so they also have been put on the I don't need list.
1.0.0 Red Eyed Leaf/ Frog - Agalychnis callidryas
1.1.1 Bumblebee Dart Frog - Dendrobates leucomelas
1.1.0 Dendrobates truncatus - Yellow Striped
1.1.1 Dendrobates tinctorius – Bakhuis Mountain
1.1.0 - Dendrobates tinctorius - Powder Blue
1.1.0 - Ranitomeya vanzolinii
Don't assume that widow venom has the same effect on amphibians as it does on mammals. I know that native toads can eat them, that doesn't necessarily mean that other amphibians can do the same though. To echo the thoughts/feelings of others: feeding wild inverts to your captive animals is always a bad idea, especially if they are potentially dangerous.
I'm actually spending the day laying on the couch because of a spider bite. Probably just a bad reaction to a more harmless species since I'm only feeling slightly horrible and it's getting no worse. Eh, I'm sure wild frogs eat spiders all the time, but we have no way of knowing how often that ends badly.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)