That would almost give you a rounded experience with tarantulas, but three are missing from making a collection complete:
The Obligate Burrower
The Attitude, Defensive, Aggressive, Shy...whatever you want to cal them, every one need at least one. :biggrin:
Communal Group
I have two female Brachypelma species that was sold to me in 2002 from the Yucatan as Brachypelma sp., (Yucatan Rust Rump). They have the black spot on the abdomen as the spider pictured and are six inches in leg length. It looks like a male of the same species.
I would keep her in a quiet place, don't disturb her and take the crickets out. The environment you keep her in sounds and look good. She looks normal to me and her abdomen is not oversized. I have several; one in particular that is eleven years old, for the last sixteen months, she has been...
This is a coincident that this thread come up. I recently bred the Brachypelma annitha. I posted pictures of the breeding. One of the females produced an egg sack and now I have tons of nymphs. They are in their second instar. Here are a few pictures.
Juvenile 4" (female)
Adult 6"...
Where may I ask did you get your A. seemanni from or should I say who? I prefer the Black and cream color over the BCF. It looks more elegant. I haven't seen them in the trade in quite some time. I believe that they come from a different regions also.
Here is my female Nhandu tripedii. I have had her for eleven (11) years old and is a solid seven (7) inches. The older she gets, the sweeter she has become.
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