Mythological |
Lynx Felt lol |
TheLandOfFishAndFish |
Yeah, and especially widows are very docile spiders, I've owned Latrodectus menavodi before and they're really not different in temperament to false widows. You'd have to squeeze them to get them to bite, so just watch where you're sitting if you have the more dangerous species in your area. Recluses get a really bad reputation for little reason too. And the thing with them is that people tend to misidentify every brownish spider as one, and it gets a lot of random spiders killed and obviously makes a lot of people scared :( There's a funny song on youtube "It's not Loxosceles" about this phenomenon |
Versailles |
Fish, And yes, absolutely rabies had a huge contribution to it since there is basically no survival to it. Bats had to find a way around it since it spread SO fast through their colonies. And they did! But that also means that we, as humans, have to respect bat species and give them their space. They've got enough going on without us contributing to their decline. |
Versailles |
Fish, That'd be the honduran white bat you mentioned! I don't think I have a favourite, I generally really enjoyed seeing them all. Maybe the Virginia big-eared bat? |
TheLandOfFishAndFish |
Versa That's interesting, never knew that bats vere immune to so many diseases. I wonder though if that's not also thanks to rabies. Since bats live in large colonies where spreading of the virus is very fast, they needed to evolve some level of immunity in order to not go extinct. In turn, that strenghtened immune system probably meant they had an easier time dealing with other pathogens. Now, once again not an expert but this is a fascinating subject. What is your favourite bat species? Mine are the little white ones that live on leaves, don't remember what they're called |
Versailles |
Fish, The species that have it the worst are black widows, and recluse. Should you treat the bites? Absolutely! But you should treat ALL animal bites regardless. The odds of someone actually dying to either of those species are minimal these days. You've gotta be VERY allergic. Not even to mention the high majority of spider bites being dry bites, including in the widow and recluse families. |
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TheLandOfFishAndFish |
Yeah, and especially widows are very docile spiders, I've owned Latrodectus menavodi before and they're really not different in temperament to false widows. You'd have to squeeze them to get them to bite, so just watch where you're sitting if you have the more dangerous species in your area. Recluses get a really bad reputation for little reason too. And the thing with them is that people tend to misidentify every brownish spider as one, and it gets a lot of random spiders killed and obviously makes a lot of people scared :( There's a funny song on youtube "It's not Loxosceles" about this phenomenon |
Versailles |
Fish, And yes, absolutely rabies had a huge contribution to it since there is basically no survival to it. Bats had to find a way around it since it spread SO fast through their colonies. And they did! But that also means that we, as humans, have to respect bat species and give them their space. They've got enough going on without us contributing to their decline. |
Versailles |
Fish, That'd be the honduran white bat you mentioned! I don't think I have a favourite, I generally really enjoyed seeing them all. Maybe the Virginia big-eared bat? |
TheLandOfFishAndFish |
Versa That's interesting, never knew that bats vere immune to so many diseases. I wonder though if that's not also thanks to rabies. Since bats live in large colonies where spreading of the virus is very fast, they needed to evolve some level of immunity in order to not go extinct. In turn, that strenghtened immune system probably meant they had an easier time dealing with other pathogens. Now, once again not an expert but this is a fascinating subject. What is your favourite bat species? Mine are the little white ones that live on leaves, don't remember what they're called |
Versailles |
Fish, The species that have it the worst are black widows, and recluse. Should you treat the bites? Absolutely! But you should treat ALL animal bites regardless. The odds of someone actually dying to either of those species are minimal these days. You've gotta be VERY allergic. Not even to mention the high majority of spider bites being dry bites, including in the widow and recluse families. |
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