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Binghamton Zoo Animals

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Animal List |
Pink-Toed Tarantula
(Avicularia avicularia)
Order: Arachnida
Family: Theraphosidae
Genus: Avicularia
Species: avicularia
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HABITAT AND RANGE:
This spider is relatively widespread and
can be found in Guyana, Brazil,
Venezuela and Trinidad. |
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PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS:
The Tarantula has two body regions, the
cephalothorax (prosoma) and the abdomen
(opisthosoma). The appendages of the
cephalothorax include four pairs of
legs, a pair of pedipalps and a pair of
fang-tipped chelicerae. The abdomen
differs from that of the true spiders by
having, on the posterior, only two pairs
of spinnerets rather than three pairs,
and by having ventrally two pairs of
booklungs rather than one pair. The size
of the female Tarantula is up to 5
inches; males measure only 3.5 inches. |
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ADAPTATIONS:
The spider is an arboreal (tree-living)
species and builds long, silken tubes in
folded leaves high off the floor of the
rainforest. Molting is a fundamental
process of all arthropods. In order to
grow larger, they shed their old
exoskeleton and the new one hardens to
provide protection and a place to anchor
muscles internally. The new exoskeleton
is larger, allowing the spider to grow
internally. It also gives the spider a
complete new set of undamaged sensory
and protective hairs. Molting also gets
rid of any parasite or fungus that might
have started to grow on the outside of
the spider. Tarantulas will normally
stop feeding several days before they
molt. The molting process takes a few
hours. It begins with the spider lying
on its back. Since spiders do not die on
their backs, this position only
indicates molting. Do not touch the
tarantula until the day after the molt
to make sure the exoskeleton has
hardened enough to protect it. |
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DIET:
In the wild, the Tarantulas will eat
tree frogs, insects and the occasional
roosting bird. Tarantulas will normally
eat any prey in the right size range.
They may specialize on certain prey,
such as millipedes or desert beetles. |
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REPRODUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT:
Tarantulas may reach sexual maturity in
as few as two years (fast-growing
arboreal species in the tropics), or in
as many as nine years (burrowing
species). Males do not molt after
reaching maturity. Soon after the males
do reach maturity, they begin wandering
in search of females. Before copulation,
a male takes up his palps sperm that he
has deposited on a specially-spun sperm
web. During copulation, he inserts the
sperm into the female’s genitalia. Males
do not live for more than a couple
months after mating. Females live much
longer. They will often reach beyond 25
years in the appropriate environment. |
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STATUS IN WILD:
They are stable in the wild. |
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