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sorry, bit of a hijack.
Any idea what this is?
Sorry for the bad photos.
HOLY ****!!!! Thats one massive spider!! I would be in a huge panic attack if I saw those in my flat
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View attachment 96879View attachment 96881
sorry, bit of a hijack.
Any idea what this is?
Sorry for the bad photos.
So my friend sent me a picture of his new pet that he caught at my house
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So my friend sent me a picture of his new pet that he caught at my house
View attachment 97307
Re: the opening post, I found these while going through pics on my hard drive - this female lived in our garden for some time before disappearing one day. I'm not sure if the gardiner had had enough or if our resident Burchell's Coucal had her for breakfast.
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WTF Dude, isn't that thing poisonous??? Or at the very least creepy/scary
i'm assuming it use to be someones pet that got out, my friend took it to the petshop to get food and a cage and such for his spider and he got told this is actually a baby Trinidad Olive tarantula. They definitely do not naturally come forth in Gauteng (im from Roodepoort where we found it). So hence im saying it must have been someone's pet
i found a spider mimicking an ant this weekend
http://wongchunxing.com/Spider/AntMimicrySpiders/MyrmarachneMerotai/MyrmarachneMerotai_50b.jpg
never knew they could do that![]()
@Bwana, I'll make it my mission to ID that thing - even email Ansie Dippenaar. I saw my first one in Mpumalanga (will post pic later). Very impressive - I honestly thought they didn't occur in EC till I found one here in East London. I still think its an indistinctus but I could be wrong. It could be another less harmful comb-footed spider, but don't take chances with them.
Oh - one thing - often they can be identified by their egg sacs. Geometricus has little spiky looking egg sacs (round) while indistinctus has round smooth egg sac. Not sure about the falsies but they could be round and smooth too - will look it up.
Oh, one request... A man with an awesome camera should be using his macro! I want a good pic of that thing hehe.
Thanks - I would be interested in knowing what it was. Since I relocated it those pictures are as good as it's going to get I'm afraid.
FWIW I don't have a macro lens - in my line of work it's not really worth the expense.
Hi,
There are two of the buttons that can be so brightly coloured when young. The one more found in Central parts of SA L. renivulvatus and then T. cinctus the one found more in the Eastern coastal parts of SA.
Regards
Ansie

