Cyclocosima ricketti

Steven

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nice addition :cool: :clap:

those always make me smile,... guess it's their strange shape {D
 

Nikos

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you bad boy...what have you done to the poor creature ;) :D
 

NewGriot

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hehe...

@vardoulas:

She likes tatoos, brandings....stuff like that :D
She`s a freak....*g*
 

smalltime

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Has anyone ever seen or had a pair? I wonder wether the male looks alike... :?
 

El Johano

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Anyone heard of captive bred trapdoor sp.? The ones that you see for sale are always WC, I think.....
 

NewGriot

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@ El Johano:

Yes, it is a WC female...and I`ve never seen captive bred trapdoors...

@MetalDragon_boy:

This spider is real! ;)
 

WhyTeDraGon

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it looks like it has a reeses peanut butter cup stuck to its butt, lol.
Weird :eek:
 

Cigarman

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ok silly newb question, why does that thing have a door knob for an ass?? :?
 

Wade

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Apparently, it functons as a false bottom when the spider retreats head first down the burrow to escape from a predator. The predator either thinks it's reached the bottom of an empty burrow or else it's simply unable to get around the "plug" it forms.

Wade
 

MeteoRa

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Very interesting.... thanks for the explanation Wade...
I was just wondering if there is a function for that... :D
 

Cigarman

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I know, its the pushbutton of death! Touch this and ouchy! ;)

edit::

found this on Wiki
The taxonomy of trapdoor spiders is currently not well understood in the United States and many species of the common genus Ummidia remain undescribed. Ummidia is distributed across the southern United States. Bothriocyrtum californicum is the common trapdoor spider of the Pacific Coast. The strange genus Cyclocosmia includes four species, one in Florida, one in Georgia, one in Mexico and one in China. The discontinuous distribution is indicative of a primitive genus that was affected by continental drift. The spiders of this genus are unusual in having a mask-like hardened plate on the opisthosoma, which seems to act as a second door to exclude predators, like the spider wasps. There is a narrow part of the burrow of these spiders where the abdominal shield just barely fits. Cyclocosmia torreya builds burrows in moss banks along the Apalachicola River in Florida. Other genera of trapdoor spiders are found in other areas of the world. They actually may be more common than we may think because of their cryptic habits. They do tend to be localized in distribution and as such may be subject to extinction because of local habitat destruction.
 
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Steven

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in case you didn't knew allready,...
this is quite a good book concerning trapdoors (South_Africa)

 

FryLock

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A chap over here has bred the red one that come from Tanzania (according to Richard Gallon those are Idiopidae not Ctenizidae they get sold under loads of different names) the article was in a BTS journal i don’t know which one tho.
 

PapaRoacher

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Is there any chance of getting a pictre of that Spider's abdomen straight on?

I kinda wanna see the design it has too it... Also, how does a spider such as this build a burrow with a lid? I don't see any spinnerets :?

Or, Maybe I'm just a n00b... :?
 
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