Yeah it happened in front of my eyes. A little spidey of about 1cm walked on the keyboard of my XPS1530 laptop and suddenly disappeared under the keys. I tried to blow it but it didn't come out. I used a vacuum cleaner and hopefully got rid of it. My question is: Is there a hole/passage under the keyboard that leads to the interior of the laptop? I mean when an insect/spider were to crawl underneath the keyboard like yesterday, could it reach the mainboard and possibly damage it?

A friend of mine had caught a spider for me to check out under the microscope. I initially wanted to check it out and post about it last week. However the noobie me had placed the spider in a small deep jar and it ended up getting stuck to the jar. So I had to place it somehow into my little relaxing jar for a few days to relax the body before I could move it.


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Here is a closer view of its lower anatomy. I must say, the spider is a little hairy, with some areas with longer strands. Oh and on the leg it appears to have thicker hair that is spike like around the joint. Below are still images of it.

I did try very hard to obtain images of the eyes & mouth. But the spider was small to handle and the legs were shriveled up. Thus making it difficult to obtain nice images. After 13 minutes of checking out the spider and trying to position it properly using tweezers and a needle tip tool. I gave up, my hands were too shaky and I was afraid of damaging the spider. I need a pinning board to prop it in place then dry it. Anyways, here are the best images I could obtain of the eyes and mouth. Actually only the eyes.

Here are a couple of photos of the spider in the jar my friend had given me. At this point of time, the spider was still alive. I noticed also he had spun some web inside the jar. The web is really fine and different to the past web I had looked at.

So I decided to collect this web and place it onto a slide for viewing. After I have put the spider to sleep and in its separate jar that is. Here are photos of the web inside the jar. A little hard to see but it is very soft and fine.

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Wow, in the first few photos I got the impression this was a large, hairy, spider. But then when you show it in the jar it looks tiny, and not at all hairy.

By the way, I miss your daily posts, was happy to see this one tonight.?

Fact: This urban legend began in August, 1999 as a deliberate Internet hoax, disguised as a news story. The original version refers to a spider allegedly called Arachnius gluteus, or South American Blush Spider (literally "butt spider"). Nothing mentioned in the story is genuine; there is no such spider, no such airport, no such medical association, no such doctor, no such restaurant, and no such aeronautics board. For more detail, see Rick Vetter's hoax page.

In October, 2002 a new version of the same hoax surfaced. This one mentions a real species, the south Asian jumping spider, Telamonia dimidiata, but it is still a hoax. A jumping spider is one of the least likely to be found in such a situation; they are sun-lovers, and none are more than mildly toxic to humans. This version resurfaced in 2011.

UPDATE (12 Oct, 2021): Since publishing this article in 2014, I have been informed that the spider species I encountered is not Phoneutria boliviensis, but Phoneutria fera. The following text has been corrected accordingly.

On my third morning at the reserve, I could not help noticing that there are tiny spiders everywhere in my room: they were on the mosquito net, crawling on my backpack, climbing on my gear, and resting inside my clothes. They were everywhere. I knew there had to be a hatched egg sac somewhere close, and it seemed to be inside my room. After some time observing the baby spiders, I traced the source of the spiderlings to one wall, somewhere close to the floor, in the area where my bed stood.

Wandering spiders receive a lot of attention from the media mainly due to their medical importance but also due to misidentification of spiders that occasionally arrive with cargo originated in Latin America (a detailed explanation for this is here). Members of the genus Phoneutria are known to be harmful to humans due to their aggressive behavior and potent venom. However, this is usually over-exaggerated, and only two species from the genus are considered to be dangerous: P. nigriventer and P. fera. According to the distribution on the west side of the Amazon basin, I suspect the spider I found to be P. boliviensis, the smallest species of the genus, and also the least aggressive and dangerous (EDIT: I was wrong. See update at the top of this post).

I slowly approached the spider, crawling on my belly, camera-in-hand. When I got close enough I noticed that the mother was feeding on a large insect. From bits and pieces that were scattered below the spider I realized the prey is a blattodean nymph, member of the genus Blaberus. These are among the largest species of cockroaches, so this prey was not only challenging to capture, but also provided a decent meal for the hungry female while guarding her offspring. In general, Phoneutria spiders are efficient nocturnal hunters that feed on large insects but also on vertebrates, such as frogs, lizards and small rodents.

By the way, spiders are not monsters and I am not afraid of them. But whenever I stumble upon a large invertebrate there is always a split second of sudden surprise and amazement. I guess it is one of those overwhelming nature-related stimuli that I mentioned above.

I am utterly terrified of spiders, I really am. As I have got older it is a bit better, but I know that if I ever sore anything like this or if I was in the same room as something of this size, I would probably have a heart attack and that is the Gods honest truth. It would not need to bite me to kill me, I would probably die anyway from the stress of seeing such a beast.

You want to know the funny thing. I am going to Brazil in late October for 3 weeks. However, I am going to the North-East side of Brazil where I understand the Wandering Spider is not known to exist. Does not like dry, dry weather and lives on the floor in the jungles from what I hear.

I just hope when I am in Brazil, Mangue Seco that I do not come across anything that is bigger than a penny coin, ha ha. Spiders is my major weakness, the nightmares I have had of spiders of this size falling off the ceiling onto my face. Horrid.

The Wandering Spider be it a handsome looking critter would cause you some serious damage if you pissed it off. But oh boy they do look like a beautiful creature when they are in defensive mode. Of course, I will or hope to never see this critter in person, as I have no intention of going into the jungles and rain forests of Brazil.

The good news is, and the impression I get is that most of the seriously massive spiders and critters that will basically kill you seem to be further West of where I am going, and tend to not be in the dry North-East of Brazil.

This is the second specimen I photographed on November 8, 2015. Basically, I noticed that I had very few photographs for November-January, and wanted to run up the numbers a bit. So anyway, here is a crab spider that was hiding under the bark of a dead pine tree:

It looks similar to the Bark Crab Spider (probably genus Bassaniana) that I photographed in May of 2015, except that one was a mature male and this one is more likely a not-quite-mature female. The environment is right, too, given that this genus pretty much inhabits tree bark, and has very good camouflage for that specific environment. Given that the other one was an adult in early Spring, it is clear that they overwinter nearly grown and then mate and lay eggs sometime in May or June.

The spider under my glass, however, does not spin webs. It finds shelter under logs and sometimes IKEA beds and uses camouflage to hunt its prey. But patience and stillness are as important for the wolf spider as any other. And I must remember: solitude is not loneliness. Loneliness is the opposite. Loneliness is impatience and crackling anxiety. I must also remember that solitude requires one additional thing: space. Which will be harder to find when I am back in the city. Which the wolf spider underneath my glass does not have. By keeping it there, I am depriving it of its spiderness.

They can be a bit tricky to assemble but I did my best to provide some useful instructions. The trickiest bit is where to glue the string based on the size of your spider. I bought a 50 pack of spiders from Amazon a few years ago but they are currently not available. This was the link at the time if it helps: Amazon.com

The design is based on 3mm material. All secondary steps should be set as scores, they are for later reference during assembly. In my example I printed this evening, I glued a bead onto the lid for a handle.

In Inkscape, I can make the line Kerf wide and break it apart so it becomes two lines. Then I use the outside cut for the inside part and the inside cut for the outside part. Each one then kerfs to the center of the line you wanted.

In a recent post, I highlighted an instance where a bird dung spider looked radically different when exposed to ultraviolet light. This week, we found another spider emitting a beautiful cyan hue under ultraviolet. It seems to fluoresce only under the wavelength of 365nm, rather than the more common 395nm ultraviolet wavelengths. This is a lengthy post with over 50 photos of glorious bugs, be warned!! ?

Switched off the lights, opened the shutter for 20s with the Huntsman Spider under UV light. What resulted are beautifully cyan-tinted carapace and legs. At the same time, the spider caught what looked like a caddisfly which was still struggling when the shutter was open. 152ee80cbc

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