Pages:
1
2 |
Bugman
Nomad
Posts: 143
Registered: 9-20-2006
Location: Escondido
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by surabi | Yes, those whip tails are one of the scariest looking little critters. They get really big where I live near PV. Their bodies and pincers are crablike
and they move sideways like a crab as well.
They have no toxin and are quite shy, yet every Mexican has a story about how their tio or someone got bit by one and died :-)
I keep a dead one in a jar to show visitors so they don't freak out when they see one.
My neighbor once found an albino one in his bodega, snow white.
|
More than likely he did not find an albino whip spider. He probably happened upon one that had just molted. When insects molt the cuticle is soft
and often very pale. Over the course of several minutes or hours (depends on the bug) the cuticle will harden and return to its normal color. If I
had a nickel for each time somebody told me that found an albino c-ckroach I would have retired by now. Wait 20 minutes and the roach is miraculously
not albino anymore
|
|
surabi
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4927
Registered: 5-6-2016
Member Is Offline
|
|
Quote: Originally posted by Bugman | Quote: Originally posted by surabi | Yes, those whip tails are one of the scariest looking little critters. They get really big where I live near PV. Their bodies and pincers are crablike
and they move sideways like a crab as well.
They have no toxin and are quite shy, yet every Mexican has a story about how their tio or someone got bit by one and died :-)
I keep a dead one in a jar to show visitors so they don't freak out when they see one.
My neighbor once found an albino one in his bodega, snow white.
|
More than likely he did not find an albino whip spider. He probably happened upon one that had just molted. When insects molt the cuticle is soft
and often very pale. Over the course of several minutes or hours (depends on the bug) the cuticle will harden and return to its normal color. If I
had a nickel for each time somebody told me that found an albino c-ckroach I would have retired by now. Wait 20 minutes and the roach is miraculously
not albino anymore |
Nope, he caught it and kept it for a few days until giving it to a friend who is fascinated by them. Stayed bright white. Any creature can be albino,
I believe. Of course it's rare. But interesting to know about the molting process.
|
|
imlost
Nomad
Posts: 218
Registered: 3-31-2015
Location: PNW & East Cape
Member Is Offline
|
|
One of our friends who were guests at our casa this week, mistakenly left a couple camp chairs folded up outside on our patio. We discovered three of
these spiders inside when we unfolded the chairs. They are quite large - For reference, the blue tile in the top right corner of the picture is 4"x4"
and the grout line is about an inch wide. I believe this is a Huntsman Spider. Can anyone verify?
[Edited on 5-1-2023 by BajaNomad]
|
|
DeMinimis
Nomad
Posts: 271
Registered: 1-7-2008
Location: Orygun
Member Is Offline
|
|
About to finish up this Bug soon. Not going to Baja it though. Sorry.
You gonna eat that?
|
|
Bubba
Senior Nomad
Posts: 957
Registered: 2-17-2009
Location: Pismo Beach, Ca.
Member Is Offline
|
|
Love the old Bugs, nice color!
Making America Great Again
|
|
Alm
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2729
Registered: 5-10-2011
Member Is Offline
|
|
Did anybody ever die in Baja of scorpion bite? From what I hear, Baja bark scorpions are different from Arizona bark scorpions. The latter "might"
kill you, one fatality per few thousands bites.
Other scorpion species are less deadly yet - if there are other species in Baja. To me, they all look like bark scorpion.
|
|
Pages:
1
2 |