I think my de hanni is done for. I checked on him today and he is on top of his substrate, legs are slightly twitching and an isopod was eating part of his antenna. I took him out and put him in another container but he is pretty unresponsive and twitching. Two spots on his body appear to be a...
Ultimately it is up to you to decide if you are going to get one. Just be very respectful and mindful of how quick and dangerous these are. I own two of them and keep them locked up in some acrylic cages. Beautiful scorps but very quick when they want to be and quite defensive.
Looks fine to me, except the bottle cap. I have two in seperate cages that I purchased from http://www.tarantulacages.com/
They have some cork bark to hide under and for the most part they only really come out at night though they are in the corner of my room and sometimes they wander...
Shipping to and from India would take too long for anything living, not to mention the hassle of dealing with customs. Your best off finding a local species or if someone local or in a nearby country that could hand carry it ;)
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While the discourse in envenomation and subsequent jabs back and forth between our resident experts is mildly entertaining at first and increasingly tiresome further in. I believe it has become a point neither side can agree on.
Both groups should agree to disagree, especially since...
http://www.arachnoboards.com/ab/showthread.php?t=119629
Niloticus has both listed. Not sure if they still have them though. That is where I purchased my two A. australis
The small photo is stated to be a baby while the larger photo that is revealed when the small photo is clicked on is an adult. As stated in the description on Botar's website. Many of the photo's that Randy took really bring out the colors in the subjects, probably due to great lighting...
Actually right now I have two A. australis that are living together. In fact they stay right near each other since I've received them. One looks gravid so I plan on seperating them soon.
I always tried to keep mine above 70% humidity and the temps above 80 degrees F. If they are too hot they will dig to get away from the heat, since the substrate will be cooler. I think they would be fine in the 100 degrees, probably just more active, during the summer I had mine out in the...
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