2nd instar B. albopilosum Nicaragua Slings
Liquifin

2nd instar B. albopilosum Nicaragua Slings

Most of them are 2nd instar now, but a little bit of 1st instar left. I know it's hard to tell since they're clutched up, but enjoy the picture.
That's so many little spoders. Out of a yield like this, how many make it to adulthood? (In captivity I mean)
 
@spodermin I'd say almost all of them will make it to adulthood if the owner loves them with proper care and if they molt successfully each time.
 
@Liquifin cool, so when somebody says a certain spider has 1000 slings per eggsac you could count on like 700+ being viable? That's a massive profit to be made for a breeder. I may be in the wrong line of business
 
@spodermin sometimes all or almost all eggs are good....species with huge sacs command very low wholesale value and arent easy sells, so they stick around a while, taking up time and space.

Most, or at least a lot of species have 50-120 being more normal.
 
@cold blood yeah that's very true but regardless, I thought even the lower yield species saw a condlsiderable falloff. This is good to know
 

Media information

Category
Tliltocatl
Added by
Liquifin
Date added
View count
1,493
Comment count
6
Rating
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Image metadata

Device
Apple iPhone 5
Aperture
ƒ/2.4
Focal length
4.1 mm
Exposure time
1/320
ISO
50
Flash
On, fired
Filename
IMG_0464.JPG
File size
2.1 MB
Date taken
Fri, 05 April 2019 10:28 PM
Dimensions
3264px x 2448px

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