Binghamton Zoo Animals

 

Stripe Knee Tarantula

(Aphonopelma seemanni)
Order: Arachnida
Family: Theraphosidae
Genus: Aphonopelma
Species: seemanni

HABITAT AND RANGE: They are terrestrial burrowing spiders native to the tropical forests of Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador and Honduras.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS: The Tarantula is usually a brown to black color with russet hairs, orange spinnerets and underbelly. The legs are dark brown/black with distinct longitudinal cream lines down the legs. Like all tarantulas it 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 bodies of both male and female are always covered with bristly hairs, a feature that other spiders don’t have. This is a large spider with a body length of about 2 ½ inches and a leg span of about 5 inches.

ADAPTATIONS: The Stripe Knee Tarantula can secrete silk from their feet to provide adhesion during locomotion, enabling these spiders to cling to smooth vertical surfaces.

DIET: In the wild, the Tarantulas will eat small amphibians or mammals and insects. Tarantulas will normally eat any prey in the right size range. They crush their prey with their fangs and spit digestive juices over the body and then suck up the resulting liquid.

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. The males have hooks on the first set of legs that will help hold the female above them during copulation. 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. After the male has inserted his sperm he leaves very quickly before the female has a chance to eat him. Females will then lay 100 to 400 eggs hatching between 1 ½ to 2 1/2 months. The young are about the size of a golf ball. They are fairly short lived; females have a life span of 12 to 15 years and males die soon after maturity, at 3 years.

STATUS IN WILD: They are stable in the wild.